Coulomb's Law
This can be explained in terms of zero-point neutrinos, as follows:
- The density of charged neutrinos around a
charged sphere falls off by the inverse square law. This can be
derived directly from geometry. The surface area of a sphere
increases with the square of its radius, thus reducing density by
the inverse square law.
- The probability of a collision between two
charged neutrinos, one from each charged sphere, depends on the
number of charged neutrinos bouncing off of them. This in turn
depends on the charge on the spheres themselves. Using basic
probability theory, we get that the chance of a collision is
directly related to the product of the two charges.
- The constant k is a measure of the availability
of zero-point neutrinos.
Coulomb's Law explained
It
follows from this that Coulomb's law can
be seen as supporting evidence for the position that the electric
force is communicated by colliding particles.
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