From: BURT on
If the electric force has an opposite which acts as an attraction it
would mean that the electron and protons ought to come together
because of it. But you have to force these particles together so how
can you say they attract one another?

Mitch Raemsch
From: Igor on
On May 4, 10:21 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> If the electric force has an opposite  which acts as an attraction it
> would mean that the electron and protons ought to come together
> because of it. But you have to force these particles together so how
> can you say they attract one another?
>

Learn some real physics and find out.

From: Cwatters on

"BURT" <macromitch(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:94600397-ac7c-4da8-a745-48fe416cdfa2(a)h37g2000pra.googlegroups.com...
> If the electric force has an opposite which acts as an attraction it
> would mean that the electron and protons ought to come together
> because of it. But you have to force these particles together so how
> can you say they attract one another?
>
> Mitch Raemsch

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090214124530AAfM4lg



From: john on
On May 5, 5:46 am, "Cwatters"
<colin.wattersNOS...(a)TurnersOakNOSPAM.plus.com> wrote:
> "BURT" <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message
>
> news:94600397-ac7c-4da8-a745-48fe416cdfa2(a)h37g2000pra.googlegroups.com...
>
> > If the electric force has an opposite  which acts as an attraction it
> > would mean that the electron and protons ought to come together
> > because of it. But you have to force these particles together so how
> > can you say they attract one another?
>
> > Mitch Raemsch
>
> http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090214124530AAfM4lg

Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha

And this is your 'science'?

Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
From: john on
On May 4, 8:21 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> If the electric force has an opposite  which acts as an attraction it
> would mean that the electron and protons ought to come together
> because of it. But you have to force these particles together so how
> can you say they attract one another?
>
> Mitch Raemsch

The electron and proton, given enough time
and no energy input, will recombine
into the virtual pair they once were.

When the black hole came along, however it was
produced, all the virtual pairs within its influence
were given extreme spin.

Since the two opposite charges, clinging
together by their attraction to each other,
are given the same extreme spin, they repel
each other by their magnetism, and, absorbing
a neutrino, they become oppositely-charged
high-energy particles and are shot out the
jets of the black hole.

Eventually, by the attraction of their electric charge, they
come together as suns.

The HEPs at the suns' centers are fused
into atoms, with the electron being
brought into the proton's sphere and
neutrinos and energy are given off.

The neutrinos are everywhere stars are and
are constantly being absorbed by galactic
centers as infalling matter is spun back into HEPs
and ejected out the jets. Absorption of these
neutrinos causes galaxies to push on each other.
This is the gravity that affects galaxies.

The gravity affecting (not effecting!!!) matter comes from this
same process taking place within electrons
and protons.

john