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Originally posted by Angelic Resurrection
Its remarkable but Lol come to think of it i've acheived more in a single year of research
Originally posted by Mary Rose
I see that those comments are from user "aetherwizard."
The magnetic structure of the bowl reflects the actual structure of the quantum magnetic field of the electrons and protons. This is why the magnetic bowls have such unusual and useful properties.
Originally posted by Angelic Resurrection
reply to post by buddhasystem
Good God, now you have certainly got me worried.
Originally posted by Fromabove
I have long believed that the field around a magnet is not stationary but that it rotates at the speed of light.
Originally posted by Fromabove
I have long believed that the field around a magnet is not stationary but that it rotates at the speed of light.
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Originally posted by Fromabove
I have long believed that the field around a magnet is not stationary but that it rotates at the speed of light.
You got stars for that post.
Facepalm.
Which way does it rotate???
Originally posted by ImaFungi
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Originally posted by Fromabove
I have long believed that the field around a magnet is not stationary but that it rotates at the speed of light.
You got stars for that post.
Facepalm.
Which way does it rotate???
hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu...
Originally posted by Mary Rose
LaPoint has posted this article on Facebook and says that this is the area he has been focusing on for the last six years, and that this article only touches on what is possible: "Bioelectric Signals Can Be Used to Detect Early Cancer."
Telomeres protect a cell's chromosomes from fusing with each other or rearranging—abnormalities that can lead to cancer—and so cells are destroyed when their telomeres are consumed. Most cancers are the result of "immortal" cells that have ways of evading this programmed destruction
Telomerase, thus, "replenishes" the telomere "cap" of the DNA. In most multicellular eukaryotic organisms, telomerase is active only in germ cells, stem cells, and certain white blood cells. There are theories that claim that the steady shortening of telomeres with each replication in somatic (body) cells may have a role in senescence and in the prevention of cancer. This is because the telomeres act as a sort of time-delay "fuse", eventually running out after a certain number of cell divisions and resulting in the eventual loss of vital genetic information from the cell's chromosome with future divisions.
Originally posted by DenyObfuscation
Originally posted by Fromabove
I have long believed that the field around a magnet is not stationary but that it rotates at the speed of light.
Why do you believe that?
If it does, why do iron filings not follow? Trying to get your point, that's all.
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Relax. At least I'm not using a zucchini as a chronometer capable of validating or disproving General Relativity. THAT is what's worrisome.
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Originally posted by ImaFungi
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Originally posted by Fromabove
I have long believed that the field around a magnet is not stationary but that it rotates at the speed of light.
You got stars for that post.
Facepalm.
Which way does it rotate???
hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu...
Don't see rotation in your link...
Originally posted by ImaFungi
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Originally posted by ImaFungi
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Originally posted by Fromabove
I have long believed that the field around a magnet is not stationary but that it rotates at the speed of light.
You got stars for that post.
Facepalm.
Which way does it rotate???
hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu...
Don't see rotation in your link...
"The direction of the magnetic field is perpendicular to the wire and is in the direction the fingers of your right hand would curl if you wrapped them around the wire with your thumb in the direction of the current."
how else could a magnetic field be considered rotating, besides it having a circular direction?