Electron perfectly round after all?

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No it's the non-spherical ones that cause the 'shot' noise. Like bad bearings those electrons are 'shot' and need replacing.

George H.

Reply to
George Herold
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Oh you beat me too it.

George H.

Reply to
George Herold

Send them here. We plate them and regrind to round. For a price. :)

Reply to
tm

On a sunny day (Sat, 28 May 2011 17:24:09 -0400) it happened ehsjr wrote in :

Not sure, I have some grapes, and some apples, could have accidently been photographed with the diagrams, they taste good, but are not completely round. YMMV

Reply to
Jan Panteltje

On a sunny day (Sat, 28 May 2011 17:19:31 -0400) it happened Bitrex wrote in :

Yes that is the one.

Reply to
Jan Panteltje

On a sunny day (Sat, 28 May 2011 16:24:17 -0400) it happened "Tom Del Rosso" wrote in :

I seems they detect the absense of a dipole monent, so measure charge.

A 'pointlike' charge works nicely mathematically, however in nature infinities (also on the smaller and smaller side) do not normally happen. Maybe if you could magnify and magnify you would land on the electron and see it is some sort of sun radiation something. Very old idea of course,

For Sci Fi you would land on it, find some civilisation sending out charge bullets with big cannons ;-)

Reply to
Jan Panteltje

One, nothing is perfect; this "ideal" stuff is pure fantasy. Two; didn't Schroedinger say something about probability, which might be interpreted as "fuzzy", then all we need is it to be warm.. Three: didn't Heisenberg say it ain't where you think it is?

Reply to
Robert Baer

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