Article: <5dsoml$1a7@sjx-ixn7.ix.netcom.com>
From: saquo@ix.netcom.com(Nancy )
Subject: Re: ENERGY WAVES - the Zetas Explain
Date: 12 Feb 1997 15:47:33 GMT
In article <32FEC397.51CB@acs.tamu.edu> Eric Kline
writes:
> Which particles are the heat particles?
> What is the mass of the supposed heat particle(s)?
> How do they interact with other particles?
> Do they decay? If so, into what?
> eric kline <emk9267@acs.tamu.edu>
(Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
Obviously they are particles you have not yet NAMED! Think back
just a hundred years? What did you have then, in the line of
subatomic particles? What do you have now? Before the concept of
subatomic particles, there was matter and energy, period. You're
still on the road to understanding atoms and their components.
You know that SOME energy is caused by the movement of particles,
such as electricity, but still call heat and magnetism a force or
energy field, rather than particles.
You have no name for heat particles, calling this simply
"heat". Regarding the mass of these subatomic
particles, which are not singular but many, this would be moving
into an area that Nancy would not translate well, nor does your
math language hold the symbols and concepts we would need in
order to convey the concept. Subatomic particles do no
"decay", they disburse. What you call decay just
demonstrates you lack of understanding of the process you are
observing.
(End ZetaTalk[TM])