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Quantum theory says that at the interaction of the electron
with the vacuum, the energy and mass of it become infinite.
How can electron escape its infinity?
Pleas, remember, electron not a professional mathematician.
It maybe a particle, maybe a wave.
http://www.socratus.com

2006-08-10 12:44:59 · 4 answers · asked by socratus 2 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

4 answers

This question makes no sense whatsoever. Quantum theory says nothing about the interaction of an electron with a vacuum. Relativity says mass, and therefore the amount of energy required to move it, becomes infinite at the speed of light. Of course an electron is not a professional mathematician - that's nonsensical.

2006-08-10 12:52:53 · answer #1 · answered by Will 6 · 1 0

You have the question backward. The electron is obviously OK--the question is whether quantum theory has a way of self-consistently calculating the electron's mass and charge. It does--the technique which enables this calculation is "renormalization."

2006-08-10 13:31:46 · answer #2 · answered by Benjamin N 4 · 0 0

answer in straightforward electronics e book you'll loose electrons thats said as a hollow value yet a floater will come with the help of and fill it up this all occurs at 186,000 mile a sec so do not seek for it oh there is going one now

2016-11-24 19:17:11 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

what am I ? Einstein?

2006-08-10 12:48:30 · answer #4 · answered by Pearl 5 · 0 3

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