From: Archimedes Plutonium on 6 Aug 2010 01:02 I happened to spy some old posts of mine in a chemistry forum archiving some of my old posts: --- quoting some archived old posts of mine --- Chemistry Chemistry Science Re: Synchrotron Radiation intrinsic to atomic structure? Re: pulsars &quasars h Re: Synchrotron Radiation intrinsic to atomic structure? Re: pulsars &quasars h someone wrote: > >Does an isolated single atom of radium display Synchrotron Radiation? Is it > >the luminescence of radium that is synchrotron radiation. > > No. All accelerating charges, including changing directions (such as in a > synchrotron) radiate > electromagnetic energy. To get your atom of radium to generate synchrotron > radiation, > you'll have to ionize it and accelerate the ion. > > The luminescence from the old radium watches isn't really from the radium > but from zinc sulfide. > Energetic alpha particles from the radioactive decay of radium strike the > zinc sulfide (mixed > with the radium) and the zinc sulfide produces light. > I concede to your point about radium, and tonight have looked for another isotope that is not compounded or molecularized for yielding the luminescence. The best I could do was Cobalt 60 with its blue glow. My question then would be, is this blue glow of Cobalt 60 due to the radioactivity emission of Cobalt 60 in that it is indeed, genuine synchrotron radiation. I guess I am not making my question crystal clear enough. What I want to know is whether Synchrotron Radiation can be a fundamental characteristic **inside of atoms**. Or, whether all synchrotronradiation is a secondary phenomenon and never a fundamental aspect found inside of atoms. Primary atomic structures are spin, magnetic moment, angular momentum etc etc. Is Synchrotron Radiation ever a primary atomic structure? Radioactivity is a primary atomic structure. Is SynchrotronRadiation also as primary and fundamental to a single atom as Radioactivity. I hope that makes clear of what I seek. And as a sidenote, this discussion of SynchrotronRadiation reminds me so much of temperature as a fundamental atomic structure. Most every physicist today would say temperature is not a primary structure of a single atom since they believe an atom has no internal parts to make a temperature. But Debroglie wrote a entire book on the idea that a atom has internal temperature. And I believe an atom has internal temperature due to the dots of the electron-dot- cloud are the numerous particles that create an internal temperature and the internal temperature of 231Pu is 2.71 Kelvin. So this temperature question reminds me of this question of whether a Isolated Atom has internal SychrotronRadiation provided it is radioactive atom. I would disagree with you, for I believe the Isolated Atom has not only an internal temperature created from those numerous dots of the electron- dot-cloud but also if that atom is radioactive that it also has a fundamental internal SynchrotronRadiation that can be calculated. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies Re: Synchrotron Radiation intrinsic to atomic structure? Re: pulsars &quasars h Archimedes Plutonium wrote: > someone wrote: > > > >Does an isolated single atom of radium display Synchrotron Radiation? Is it > > >the luminescence of radium that is synchrotron radiation. > > > > No. All accelerating charges, including changing directions (such as in a > > synchrotron) radiate > > electromagnetic energy. To get your atom of radium to generate Thinking about this, it seems to me that given the atomic structure of any and all radioactive isotopes that all of them would have some degree of acceleration of its radioactive emitted electron or proton particles whether they be e emissions or alpha particles. And because every chemical element has a different internal geometry such as uranium is different from plutonium that this internal geometry would also cause an emitting radioactive particle to accelerate once emitted from the nucleus. Thus, it seems to me that every radioactive isotope has internal SynchrotronRadiation. Taken for granted that the degree of synchrotron radiation by uranium would not be much different from that of plutonium just as the internal temperature of uranium would be a not much different from the 2.71 degrees Kelvin of plutonium. Every atom has an internal temperature because every atom has dots of the electron-dot-cloud. By the same sort of reasoning since every radioactive atom has emission of charged particles is accelerated and thus they all have synchrotronradiation as intrinsic. --- end quoting old posts of mine --- Now I was wondering as I was rereading my old posts above as to what I was thinking when I wrote them. Was I thinking that intrinsic synchrotron radiation of an atom totality would be visible or noticeable as a cosmic feature? Was I thinking that pulsars and quasars are the side-effect of synchrotron-radiation of an atom totality? Or could even the cosmic redshift be a synchrotron-radiation effect? I do not know at this moment. I do not know enough about synchrotron radiation if it exists inside an atom and especially an Atom Totality as to what that radiation results as a observation for intelligent life. Archimedes Plutonium http://www.iw.net/~a_plutonium/ whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies
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