[General] Can cyclic-photon electrons better describe superconductivity?

Roychoudhuri, Chandra chandra.roychoudhuri at uconn.edu
Thu Mar 21 09:48:01 PDT 2019


Many thanks, Dan, for re-energizing the group discussions.
Chandra.

From: General <general-bounces+chandra.roychoudhuri=uconn.edu at lists.natureoflightandparticles.org> On Behalf Of Richard Gauthier
Sent: Thursday, March 21, 2019 4:16 AM
To: Nature of Light and Particles - General Discussion <general at lists.natureoflightandparticles.org>
Subject: Re: [General] Can cyclic-photon electrons better describe superconductivity?

Hi Dan,
   Thanks for sharing your real name.

   Most if not all of the models of an electron as a cycling photon-like object or other circulating wave-like object on this discussion list are for an electron moving in free space. My internally-superluminal relativistic quantum-vortex electron model and related double-helix photon model are described in the article
Quantum-entangled superluminal double-helix photon produces a relativistic superluminal quantum-vortex zitterbewegung electron and positron<https://nam01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.academia.edu%2Fattachments%2F57862769%2Fdownload_file%3Fs%3Dportfolio&data=02%7C01%7Cchandra.roychoudhuri%40uconn.edu%7Ce63059705f574f4a399308d6add58848%7C17f1a87e2a254eaab9df9d439034b080%7C0%7C0%7C636887529974077771&sdata=G0HvZm7dqKlCpn9qKOOiRazlMAnx1H7d7m2hYXER8dE%3D&reserved=0> at https://richardgauthier.academia.edu/research<https://nam01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Frichardgauthier.academia.edu%2Fresearch&data=02%7C01%7Cchandra.roychoudhuri%40uconn.edu%7Ce63059705f574f4a399308d6add58848%7C17f1a87e2a254eaab9df9d439034b080%7C0%7C0%7C636887529974087780&sdata=Jd3aY3b7P9xU2Rh9CALc06a30ojVB5cby6%2FaKSQdDmQ%3D&reserved=0>. I’ll have another article soon with more details for the relativistic electron model. For example, I found that for BOTH the resting quantum-vortex electron model and the very highly relativistic quantum-vortex electron model (as gamma -> infinity), its  minimum internal speed is calculated to be c and its maximum internal superluminal speed is calculated to be c sqrt(5)= 2.236c, although the maximum and minimum speeds vary in an interesting way between these two electron speeds.
We are open to suggestions, comments and questions.

     all the best,
           Richard



On Mar 20, 2019, at 5:04 PM, DataPacRat <datapacrat at gmail.com<mailto:datapacrat at gmail.com>> wrote:

I'm still reading up on several peoples' approaches to electrons being
made of cycling photons, but the lack of consistent terms between the
different authours is making it hard for me to Google for further
elaborations. For example, has any modelling been done on how
electrons of this sort behave while superconducting? That is, does
this model offer any testable predictions beyond that of the
classical, single-point particle model of an electron?


(PS: I've been asked to share my real name on this list. It's Daniel
Eliot Boese, though I've been using DataPacRat since '01, and it's my
preferred nom-de-net.)

Thank you for your time,
--
Dan Boese, aka DataPacRat
"Does aₘᵢₙ=2c²/Θ ? I don't know, but wouldn't it be fascinating if it were?"
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