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Could Galileo Be Wrong?
送交者: c_y_lo 2010年10月28日07:57:45 于 [教育学术] 发送悄悄话

Could Galileo Be Wrong?

C. Y. Lo

Applied and Pure Research Institute

7 Taggart Drive, Unit E, Nashua, NH 03060

October 2010

 

Abstract

When the static charge-mass interaction is present, the free falling will be slower. Thus, the 1993 press release of the Nobel Committee on the experimental verifications of the equivalence between gravitational and inertial mass has been out dated. This shows that general relativity is clearly inadequate, in addition to the NASA’s Pioneer Anomaly.

Key Words: repulsive force, charge-mass interaction, charged capacitors, Pioneer Anomaly.

04.20.-q, 04.20.Cv

 

 

Historically, Galileo showed that objects of different weight would fall with the same speed toward earth. Thus, Aristotle’s thesis that heavier matter falls faster is wrong. However, as Einstein pointed out, one cannot prove a theory with experiments. Thus, it is not clear whether Galileo’s statement is always true.

Now, with the discovery of the charge-mass repulsive force, Galileo could be wrong, but Aristotle would be right. Consider two charged particles such as the electron and the proton. The attractive force toward the proton is much larger than the attractive force toward the electron since their masses have a difference of about 2000 times. However, the charge-mass repulsive forces toward these two particles are the same because they have the same absolute charge [1]. Thus, the electron would fall slower than the proton. This difference should be observable in vacuum.

One may note also that a charged particle would emit electromagnetic wave and thus has a radiative reaction force. However, this force is absent when the acceleration is zero and is negligible for the free fall. Moreover, for the same falling accelerations this slowing down would also make the electron falling slower since the mass of proton is much larger. Moreover, since the neutron has no charge, it would fall faster than the proton and the electron.

Similarly, a charged capacitor would fall slower even though it remains neutral because of the charge-mass interaction [1]. Therefore, the claim of Galileo is actually not valid although his observation is approximately valid. In other words, the test of what the 1993 press release of the Nobel Committee [2] termed “the equivalence principle” (which is actually only intimately connected with Einstein’s equivalence principle [3; p. 58]), the identity between gravitational and inertial mass is valid only when the charge-mass interaction is absent.

Acknowledgments: This work is supported in part by Innotec Design, Inc., U. S. A.

References:

1.         C. Y. Lo, Limitations of Einstein’s Equivalence Principle and the Mass-Charge Repulsive Force, Physics Essays 21 (1), 44-51 (March 2008).

2.         The 1993 Press Release of the Nobel Prize Committee (The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Stockholm, Oct. 1993).

3.         A. Einstein, The Meaning of Relativity (Princeton Univ. Press 1954).

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