>Jerry W. Decker wrote:
>> There was an interesting presentation put on by a Russian scientist a
>> few years ago in Russia. He claimed all masses emitted waves, like
>> ripples in a pond and that when these waves collide, they interferred
>> with each other to create dimples or depressed areas....he claims this
>> is the source of gravity...
>VERY intresting and new, but what kind of waves ? Electromagnetic ?
>Any name of Russian scientist? Other references ?
I don't know of the material to which you refer. However a number of
people, me included, believe that all particles are spherical standing
waves of e/m. For any particle the wavelength of the waves is the
Compton wavelength of the particle given by h/mc. IMO the inward and
outward waves have a very slight energy difference (all particles'
masses are growing at the Hubble rate or increasing by 1 part in 10^10
per year) which explains both the Hubble redshift relationship and
gravity.
See Milo Wolff's science corner at http://www.sirius.com/~flapjack/milo/
for a description of the electron as a spherical standing wave with a
spherical rotation between the inward and outward wave. He has deduced
all the known properties of the electron from this model.
-- Ray Tomes -- http://www.kcbbs.gen.nz/users/rtomes/rt-home.htm
Cycles email list -- http://www.kcbbs.gen.nz/users/af/cyc.htm
Boundaries of Science http://www.kcbbs.gen.nz/users/af/scienceb.htm