Hi all here on OUR. I'm new here and english is not my first language - so please excuse any "strange wordings"...
First of all: this is by far the best forum regarding alternative physics (as far as I am aware of...) - congratulations!
I'm still busy digging into all the posts and surely haven't got my head around all the theories posted here.
Shortly to my standpoint: I believe in the aether (or whatever you may call the underlying structure of the "classical quantum physics"), I have read - beside many other theories - T. Bearden (don't agree too much), Harold Aspden (yes, but not completely convinced) ...and of course Nikola Tesla, who is my "favourite workbench and lab in reading".
I have an engineering background (which is more than never a real obstacle...) and also have an eye on the biological aspects of "non-classical" physics - I just want to play it safe enough
. Grumpy's post "...that will blow your hair back..." lead me to this website. But more to this maybe at another time...
So, now I want to bring up a thread again, which, like some of the most interesting other ones, ends with an open question from Grumpy... (...maybe i'm the only only one here who doesn't get it, then please let me know...)
Non-ionic currents appear conductive.
...and can discharge just like conduction currents, but there is a slight difference
Anyone know what the difference is?
As far as I understand it, in "non-ionic currents" no charge in form of an electron or ion moves, like the displacement current (is this the only non-ionic current?).
These currents appear conductive like in the paper by Edwards and Saha discussed, so charge movement is a secondary effect.
If you, Grumpy, didn't like the words "electromagnetic waves" in the abstract of this article, I would not be surprised.
The non-ionic currents are the movements by the "particles" mentioned in:
I mention particle drift earlier. There are particle drift modes comprised of multiple forces that can add energy to (accelerate) the particles. I would not be surprised to find that this occurs in conductors. You constantly expend energy to accelerate the particles and the universe is constantly slowing them back down. Apply your forces a little differently and the universe doesn't mind so much.
If this occurs in a conductor, then the particles will move in a spiral along the conductor path, and I have heard that they do.
Then the slight difference should be:
- in ionic currents the energy is discharged by ripping molecules apart, during recombination light/waves/etc. are generated. Ion movement is what seeks to cancel the electrostatic field.
- in non-ionic currents the discharge takes place on the level of the "particles" themselves...(?)
...and here is where my wild speculations begin. Aspden's quons are also charges, what the "opposite background charge" may be, he admits having no clue...
Anyone a hint for me where to start?
...now on to more digging in the posts...
Cheers,
Sivispacem