Chemical Element Plutonium
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a_plutonium wrote: > > Now I have listed these supporting evidences according to what I deem > the greatest weight of support > Observational and experimental support > 1) density and distribution of galaxies > 2) Tifft quantized galaxy speeds > 3) layered age of Cosmos with 6.5 billion years old Cosmos yet old > galaxies > of the Uranium Atom Totality 20.2 billion years old; the Freedman     

Group: sci.physics · Group Profile · Search for Chemical Element Plutonium in sci.physics
Author: a_plutonium
Date: Jan 28, 2007 00:11

plutonium.archimedes@gmail.com wrote: Archimedes Plutonium wrote: (snipped) What makes plutonium unique is not that it has 22 subshells in 7 shells of which 19 are occupied, but what makes it unique from neptunium and americium is another physics constant and special number such as the inverse fine structure constant of 137. So is there a neptunium atom with 137 neutrons
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lundslakt...@yahoo.com wrote: > > The only reasonable way to count occupied subshells are as the > subshells > Ks Ls Lp Ms M p Md.....etc > Well first let me compliment you for trespassing into physics when you never trained in physics. To call that "reasonable" is reasonable for it comes from the Aufbau rule. I hate to call Aufbau a "principle" for it is not a principle of science     

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Author: David Bernier
Date: May 18, 2008 02:28

plutonium.archime...@gmail.com skrev: lundslakt...@yahoo.com wrote: You are wrong about ther being 19 occupied subshells in plutonium. Not so, and let me change the problem around so you will not stumble on what is counted and not counted. There are 7 shells in plutonium, of which each have respectivly: 1,2,3,4,5,6, and 7 subshells:
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Archimedes Plutonium wrote: (snipped) > What makes plutonium unique is not that it has 22 subshells in 7 > shells of which > 19 are occupied, but what makes it unique from neptunium and americium > is another > physics constant and special number such as the inverse fine structure > constant of > 137. So is there a neptunium atom with 137 neutrons and is there a > americium atom > with 137     

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Author: plutonium.archimedes
Date: May 17, 2008 23:16

lundslakt...@yahoo.com wrote: You are wrong about ther being 19 occupied subshells in plutonium. Not so, and let me change the problem around so you will not stumble on what is counted and not counted. There are 7 shells in plutonium, of which each have respectivly: 1,2,3,4,5,6, and 7 subshells: K L M N O P Q
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Archimedes Plutonium wrote: > > I am going to start numbering the above so as to keep a order to my > research: > > math forms of (A+B)v = C. > > (1) Particle + Wave = Existence > (2) Elliptic + Hyperbolic = Euclidean > (3) StrongNuclear + WeakNuclear = Coulomb > (4) Positive AP-adics + Negative AP-adics = Reals > (5) Elliptic chemistry bonds + Hyperbolic chemistry bonds = molecule     

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Author: lundslaktare
Date: May 17, 2008 11:26

Archimedes Plutonium wrote: Now to answer the previous question of "what units?" more directly, I would answer what units did A and B start with? So if we union the Gauss law of Electricity with the Gauss law of Magnetism, what units the resultant C has is the units that A and B had. If we union Ampere-Maxwell law by adding Faraday law, what units does C have in (A + B)v = C Well, the
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> > Chapters of this book: > (1) preface > (2) introduction > (3) what is this theory > (4) pictures of the Atom Totality theory and history > of the theory and precursor hints > > Observational and experimental support > > (5) density and distribution of galaxies > (6) Tifft quantized galaxy speeds > (7) layered age of Cosmos with 6.5 billion years old Cosmos yet old > galaxies of     

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Author: plutonium.archimedes
Date: May 17, 2008 10:50

a_plutonium wrote: (snipped) Chapter: What Is This Theory In as few of words as possible to describe this theory is my signature block for my posts to the Internet: The whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies. To describe the rival theory of the Big Bang theory would go like this: The universe arose from
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Author: plutonium.archimedes
Date: May 17, 2008 09:49

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Author: a_plutonium
Date: Jan 6, 2008 22:04

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Group: sci.physics · Group Profile · Search for Chemical Element Plutonium in sci.physics
Author: a_plutonium
Date: Jan 6, 2008 11:05

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Group: sci.physics · Group Profile · Search for Chemical Element Plutonium in sci.physics
Author: a_plutonium
Date: Aug 22, 2007 09:16

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Group: sci.physics · Group Profile · Search for Chemical Element Plutonium in sci.physics
Author: a_plutonium
Date: Aug 10, 2007 00:26

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