tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10800443.post111606860778950186..comments2021-08-17T13:19:26.301+05:30Comments on Nothing That Matters: Nothings And Knots Make Things!!Girish Bhatnagarhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00831896139183058366noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10800443.post-1116471905291273552005-05-19T08:35:00.000+05:302005-05-19T08:35:00.000+05:30I have been to Phoenix, and didn't have time to wr...I have been to Phoenix, and didn't have time to write. I read your post on Maxwell soon after I wrote my comment on electomagnetism. I still owe you my explanation of gravitational attraction. I will write after a couple of weeks.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10800443.post-1116412659621001092005-05-18T16:07:00.000+05:302005-05-18T16:07:00.000+05:30Welcome back Jaspal. Electrons do have mass, but u...Welcome back Jaspal. Electrons do have mass, but unlike other particles having mass, it has no measurable spatial dimention. Its considered to be a point charge.<BR/>I am as well intrigued by the elctromagnetic phenomenon. Farady established some laws based on experiments, but these were reduced to mathematics by James Clerk Maxwell. I am reading his biography. Pls see my other blog about it.<BR/>I think I will be able to write equations for structure of space if I can understand Maxwell's equations.<BR/>GirishGirish Bhatnagarhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00831896139183058366noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10800443.post-1116349687729195592005-05-17T22:38:00.000+05:302005-05-17T22:38:00.000+05:30I don't read physics that much, but my impression ...I don't read physics that much, but my impression was that electrons also have mass (and electical charge). You know more on this subject. It may be a new theory that electron has no mass. Electrical and magnetic fields also puzzle me. Have you given any thought on them? Of course, we know everything in the electrical world is based on Faraday's law. But why do two different fields perpendicular to each other produce a force on a in the third direction.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com