Difference between revisions of "Neoclassic Treatment of Ground-State Hydrogen - Part I: Structure"

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==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
A particle model of atomic hydrogen has been developed as a possible alternative to the currently ac-cepted quantum-mechanical approach.  In this neoclassic model, the electron is treated as a particle with a linear orbit that passes perpendicularly through the center of a circular proton orbit.  In accord with a recently derived version of the Lorentz force equation, the charged-particle motion within such orbits will generate magnetic and gravitational potentials that lead to the formation of spinning-disc, and thence to rotating-sphere hydrogen structures.[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
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A particle model of atomic hydrogen has been developed as a possible alternative to the currently ac-cepted quantum-mechanical approach.  In this neoclassic model, the electron is treated as a particle with a linear orbit that passes perpendicularly through the center of a circular proton orbit.  In accord with a recently derived version of the Lorentz force equation, the charged-particle motion within such orbits will generate magnetic and gravitational potentials that lead to the formation of spinning-disc, and thence to rotating-sphere hydrogen structures.
  
[[Category:Gravity]]
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|neoclassic treatment ground-state hydrogen - structure]]
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[[Category:Gravity|neoclassic treatment ground-state hydrogen - structure]]

Latest revision as of 19:43, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title Neoclassic Treatment of Ground-State Hydrogen - Part I: Structure
Author(s) William F Wolff
Keywords {{{keywords}}}
Published 1999
Journal Galilean Electrodynamics
Volume 10
Number 5
Pages 91-94

Abstract

A particle model of atomic hydrogen has been developed as a possible alternative to the currently ac-cepted quantum-mechanical approach. In this neoclassic model, the electron is treated as a particle with a linear orbit that passes perpendicularly through the center of a circular proton orbit. In accord with a recently derived version of the Lorentz force equation, the charged-particle motion within such orbits will generate magnetic and gravitational potentials that lead to the formation of spinning-disc, and thence to rotating-sphere hydrogen structures.