are the transformative properties of helium 1 and 2 responsible for the temperature of the universe and its electrical properties ?
this cannot be pure chance? or is it?
is the electric universe dependant on Helium?
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Re: is the electric universe dependant on Helium?
stevebtaylor wrote:are the transformative properties of helium 1 and 2 responsible for the temperature of the universe and its electrical properties ?
this cannot be pure chance? or is it?
are you a chemist or physicist?..transformative properties?... are He1 and He2 charged ions?... ...no, nothing is chance..it is probability...do you have a speculation about how
Here is a paper about detecting He ions.transformative properties-[are] responsible for the temperature of the universe and its electrical properties
seems like they are assuming a lot!
"It is dangerous to be right in matters where established men are wrong."
"Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire
"Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire
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Re: is the electric universe dependant on Helium?
He1 and He2 are unstable isotopes of Helium. The helium atom has 2 electrons and 2 protons with 1-8 neutrons. It is the number of neutrons that determines the isotope number. Helium is produced by nuclear fusion from hydrogen. The thermonuclear model of stars including our sun is that this fusion takes place in the center of the sun and is what powers it - when it runs out of fuel, it explodes as a supernove. The EU view, as you know, is quite different.
Helium is actually produced in the corona of the sun, if I remember correctly. This is undoubtedly behind the big interest in mainstream cosmology in finding helium in quasars. Plasma (the basis of EU) consists of ions - electrons and protons - interacting. No atoms required.
This is my current understanding and is easy to check on this website and others.
Helium is actually produced in the corona of the sun, if I remember correctly. This is undoubtedly behind the big interest in mainstream cosmology in finding helium in quasars. Plasma (the basis of EU) consists of ions - electrons and protons - interacting. No atoms required.
This is my current understanding and is easy to check on this website and others.
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