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|    sci.chem    |    Chemistry and related sciences    |    55,615 messages    |
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|    Message 54,530 of 55,615    |
|    omnilobe@gmail.com to Libor Striz    |
|    Re: Does a bound electron have a magneti    |
|    10 Mar 19 12:18:23    |
      On Sunday, March 3, 2019 at 12:43:40 PM UTC-10, Libor Striz wrote:       > omnilobe@gmail.com Wrote in message:       > >        >        > > Dear Poutnik, you say there always is a B magnetic field everywhere.       >        > Quote me exactly.        >        > > I disagree. B is about the motion of an electron relative to a protonnear       a second paired proton and electron. A place can be provided withno motion for       the external B field. The atom and its particles can have a flux density of       their own, but        without an outside target, that field means nothing. It takes two pairs to       interact as a B field effect. A lone ion is never realistic.       >        > I see you need to check your basics of quantum physics.        >        > Magnetic field created by electron orbital and spin magnetic momentum, their       mutual interaction        > and interaction with kernel magnetic momentum       > has many applications.       >        > From radioastronomy at 21 cm,        > through NMR used in chemistry and medicine       > to standard atomic clocks.       >        >        >        >        >        > --        > Poutnik ( the Wanderer )       >        >        >        > ----Android NewsGroup Reader----       > http://usenet.sinaapp.com/              I retract all I said. I am sorry, I was wrong.       Alan Folmsbee              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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