Saturday, October 29, 2011

Electron’s elastic string cycle

The Forces of Nature by Kelland Terry, Ph.D.

There was no electricity to our farm house when I was a small child, and there was no bathroom for several years. To take a bath, Mother heated some water on our wood stove, and we took turns bathing in a number 2 (?) metal tub. Today we are absolutely dependent upon electricity, and thankfully so because I don’t even own a number 2 tub. At the heart of electricity lies the electron.

The electron is a busy little particle. It creates electric fields, magnetic fields, and gravitational fields. These fields are self inducing. The creation and retraction of the elastic strings that make up these fields continually cause new fields to form as old fields disappear. It is a cyclical process that mirrors the oscillation period of an electron. I refer to it as the electron’s string cycle.

The electron makes n-magnons that arise from the north pole of the electron and it makes an equal number of s-magnons that arise from the south pole of the electron. When they meet in space they bond and retract against the surface of the electron. They form a fabric of strings that surround the electron, and when they retract they exert great inward pressure on the electron. This also happens for the electric fields as discussed in my next blog. Kelland—www.vestheory.com

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