Two slit experiment and all the associated field that can be calculated and visualize and changed now

Thank you for sharing. I finally understand the range of cohesion and “rigidity” of the electron and particle fields. That field goes through both passages, and outward at the speed of light and gravity and magnetism. The electron or ion or molecule or object interacts gravitationally with masses at the speed of gravity, with charges at the speed of electric interactions, with magnetic sources at the speed of magnetic interaction. At close distance and out to all things in the solar system and beyond.

But, your pictures are too simplistic. And a picture is not a tool to control fields and actually do things. You are not providing those tools to calculate, simulate, design and build real things.

You are using blackboard and paper methods that were really not sufficient when they were put in schools about a hundred years ago, and certainly not now when people routinely map the fields of atoms of real materials.  We can map the fields of individual electrons. We can calculate the fields of billions of individual electrons, ions, atoms, molecules and use that information to tap nuclear and atomic and magnetic energies. We can make magnetic field strong enough and dynamic fields strong enough to life most any size object now.

If you are repeating these hundred year old methods just because that is how you learned it, you are not being fair to yor viewers.  You are not being fair to the future. And you are limiting your own future when you might likely have another hundred years of healthy life to devote to exploring and doing things only dreamed about.

Please stop wasting your time and your viewers time regurgitating the click bait arguments of past generations.

Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation

Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

Director, The Internet Foundation Studying formation and optimized collaboration of global communities. Applying the Internet to solve global problems and build sustainable communities. Internet policies, standards and best practices.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *