From: mpc755 on
On Feb 23, 11:20 pm, Sam Wormley <sworml...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On 2/23/10 6:28 PM, mpc755 wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Feb 23, 6:04 pm, Sam Wormley<sworml...(a)gmail.com>  wrote:
> >> On 2/23/10 4:45 PM, mpc755 wrote:
>
> >>> What happens when the mass
> >>> associated with an electron 'converts' to energy?
>
> >>     What do you mean? Can you generate the corresponding
> >>     Feynman diagram?
>
> > What I mean is the following:
>
> > Matter and aether are different states of the same material. Matter is
> > compressed aether and aether is uncompressed matter.
>
> > 'DOES THE INERTIA OF A BODY DEPEND UPON ITS ENERGY-CONTENT? By A.
> > EINSTEIN'
> >http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/E_mc2/e_mc2.pdf
>
> > "If a body gives off the energy L in the form of radiation, its mass
> > diminishes by L/c2."
>
>    We do not observe individual electrons of different masses
>    because they lost some of their mass. The mass is quantized.
>

What does it mean in nature for the mass to be quantized? What does
the mass physically exist as in nature when it is quantized? What
becomes of the 'lost' mass? Does it still exist in nature?

You label the behavior of E=mc^2 as mass is quantized because you do
not understand what occurs physically in nature.

When you say the mass is quantized you are referring to the matter
transitioning to aether. The matter increases is volume, decreases in
density, as it transitions to aether. The physical effect this
transition has on the neighboring matter and aether is energy.

>    Your original question was, "What happens when the mass
>    associated with an electron 'converts' to energy"? I am
>    asking you what you mean by that, and can you generate the
>    corresponding Feynman diagram?

From: mpc755 on
On Feb 23, 11:20 pm, Sam Wormley <sworml...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On 2/23/10 6:28 PM, mpc755 wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Feb 23, 6:04 pm, Sam Wormley<sworml...(a)gmail.com>  wrote:
> >> On 2/23/10 4:45 PM, mpc755 wrote:
>
> >>> What happens when the mass
> >>> associated with an electron 'converts' to energy?
>
> >>     What do you mean? Can you generate the corresponding
> >>     Feynman diagram?
>
> > What I mean is the following:
>
> > Matter and aether are different states of the same material. Matter is
> > compressed aether and aether is uncompressed matter.
>
> > 'DOES THE INERTIA OF A BODY DEPEND UPON ITS ENERGY-CONTENT? By A.
> > EINSTEIN'
> >http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/E_mc2/e_mc2.pdf
>
> > "If a body gives off the energy L in the form of radiation, its mass
> > diminishes by L/c2."
>
>    We do not observe individual electrons of different masses
>    because they lost some of their mass. The mass is quantized.
>
>    Your original question was, "What happens when the mass
>    associated with an electron 'converts' to energy"? I am
>    asking you what you mean by that, and can you generate the
>    corresponding Feynman diagram?

What does it mean in nature for the mass to be quantized? What does
the mass physically exist as in nature when it is quantized? What
becomes of the 'lost' mass? Does it still exist in nature?

You label the behavior of E=mc^2 as mass is quantized because you do
not understand what occurs physically in nature.

When you say the mass is quantized you are referring to the matter
transitioning to aether. The matter increases in volume, decreases in
density, as it transitions to aether. The physical effect this
transition has on the neighboring matter and aether is energy.
From: Michael Moroney on
mpc755 <mpc755(a)gmail.com> writes:

>The electron's entire mass is not converted to energy. The electron's
>entire mass is converted to aether.

The mass-energy of annihilating electrons/positrons becomes photons and
their energy, not "aether". Two or three of them. When you get two
photons from low-energy annihilations, they are at 511 kEv each. This is
how PET scanners work.

Idiot.
From: mpc755 on
On Feb 24, 11:49 am, moro...(a)world.std.spaamtrap.com (Michael Moroney)
wrote:
> mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> writes:
> >The electron's entire mass is not converted to energy. The electron's
> >entire mass is converted to aether.
>
> The mass-energy of annihilating electrons/positrons becomes photons and
> their energy, not "aether". Two or three of them. When you get two
> photons from low-energy annihilations, they are at 511 kEv each. This is
> how PET scanners work.
>
> Idiot.

Mass of electron: 9.10938215(45)×10-31 kg
Mass of photon: 0
(Wikipedia)

When the electron is 'annihilated' there is not less mass in existence
in nature. Some of the energy is detected as photons (i.e. quanta of
aether).

After the 'annihilation' of an electron there is still the same amount
of mass in existence in nature. The matter associated with the
electron has transitioned to aether. When matter increases in volume,
decreases in density, the physical effect this transition has on the
surrounding matter and aether is energy.
From: PD on
On Feb 24, 11:15 am, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On Feb 24, 11:49 am, moro...(a)world.std.spaamtrap.com (Michael Moroney)
> wrote:
>
> > mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> writes:
> > >The electron's entire mass is not converted to energy. The electron's
> > >entire mass is converted to aether.
>
> > The mass-energy of annihilating electrons/positrons becomes photons and
> > their energy, not "aether".  Two or three of them.  When you get two
> > photons from low-energy annihilations, they are at 511 kEv each.  This is
> > how PET scanners work.
>
> > Idiot.
>
> Mass of electron: 9.10938215(45)×10-31 kg
> Mass of photon: 0
> (Wikipedia)
>
> When the electron is 'annihilated' there is not less mass in existence
> in nature.

What makes you say such a patently stupid thing like that?

> Some of the energy is detected as photons (i.e. quanta of
> aether).
>
> After the 'annihilation' of an electron there is still the same amount
> of mass in existence in nature.

There, you said that obviously stupid thing again! Why do you repeat
stupid things?

> The matter associated with the
> electron has transitioned to aether. When matter increases in volume,
> decreases in density, the physical effect this transition has on the
> surrounding matter and aether is energy.