Electromagnetic nature of nuclear energy

vendredi 29 août 2014

It is believed than the nuclear interaction is due to a mysterious "strong force" alias LQCD whose fundamental laws and constants are unknown. Its origin comes from the belief that a nucleon is like an atom. The problem is that the nucleus having no nucleus, the nucleons cannot orbit around nothing.



I have solved the problem by considering the nucleus to be static, in a way similar to that of a crystal instead of an atom. Therefore, the electromagnetic interaction works: there are two forces: the attractive electric force between a proton and a not so neutral neutron and the repulsive force between their opposite magnetic moments. The graph below shows the electromagnetic potentials of the deuteron 2H and the alpha particle 4He. The binding energy should appear at a minimum of the curves. Unfortunately, there is only a horizontal inflection point due to the Coulomb singularity. Nevertheless a good precision is obtained:



The strong force theory is unable to produce such a result because its fundamental laws are inexistent.



For more information see my paper for the deuteron:

"Electric and Magnetic Coulomb Potentials in the Deuteron":

http://ift.tt/1vw4OhW





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