Difference between revisions of "The Coriolis Force and the Rattleback"

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{{Infobox paper
 
{{Infobox paper
| title = The Coriolis Force and the Rattleback
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| title = The Centrifugal Force and the Rattleback
 
| author = [[David Tombe]]
 
| author = [[David Tombe]]
 
| published = 2010
 
| published = 2010
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The rattleback (Celtic Stone) is the most mysterious phenomenon in classical mechanics. It reverses its angular momentum by inducing a Coriolis pressure from the dense background sea of rotating electron-positron dipoles which is the medium for the propagation of light.
 
The rattleback (Celtic Stone) is the most mysterious phenomenon in classical mechanics. It reverses its angular momentum by inducing a Coriolis pressure from the dense background sea of rotating electron-positron dipoles which is the medium for the propagation of light.
  
[[Category:Scientific Paper|coriolis force rattleback]]
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|ccentrifugal force rattleback]]
  
[[Category:Aether|coriolis force rattleback]]
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[[Category:Aether|ccentrifugal force rattleback]]
[[Category:Electrodynamics|coriolis force rattleback]]
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[[Category:Electrodynamics|ccentrifugal force rattleback]]

Latest revision as of 09:23, 14 June 2022

Scientific Paper
Title The Centrifugal Force and the Rattleback
Author(s) David Tombe
Keywords {{{keywords}}}
Published 2010
Journal General Science Journal
No. of pages 3

Abstract

The rattleback (Celtic Stone) is the most mysterious phenomenon in classical mechanics. It reverses its angular momentum by inducing a Coriolis pressure from the dense background sea of rotating electron-positron dipoles which is the medium for the propagation of light.