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Part 0704 - Electron Mechanics | ARGUMENT 0704-01PRECEDENTS PARAMETERS
- Consider an understable electron.
- Consider that the electron has a gravitysheath interface.
- Consider that the electron has an escape velocity.
- Consider that the electron has a vergence velocity.
- Consider that escape velocity and vergence velocity are measured as at the gravitysheath interface.
- Consider that in an understable electron, the vergence velocity is higher than the escape velocity.
REASONING
- Because the electron is understable, its vergence velocity is higher than its escape velocity.
- Because its vergence velocity is higher than its escape velocity, it ejects gravitons across its gravitysheath interface.
- Because it is ejecting gravitons, it is differentially ejecting mass and energy.
- Because it is understable, it is ejecting more mass and energy than it is absorbing.
- Because it is ejecting more mass and energy than it is absorbing, the electron will eventually return to stability.
CONCLUSION
- That
an understable electron differentially ejects mass and energy until it becomes stable.
| COMMENTARY
Electrons are
born within gravitonstreams with a
high dynamic mass and they spend much of their existence in regions
where gravitonstreams are dense and energetic. Consequently, absorbing
and ejecting gravitons is a constant process. The graviton ejection
process automatically counters any graviton absorption so
understability in an electron is ordinarily minimal and
well-nigh undetectable by our current
instruments.
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