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then can they be changed so that they dont repel directly upwards but to a spesific direction....so if a ball was aplied to this "super" surface, it would spin in a clock wise direction, therfore spinning an axle...........

i know it sounds crazy.....but hey haha

2007-12-05 19:45:54 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

4 answers

A nice idea, but like all other perpetual motion devices, it doesn't work. It is possible to arrange atoms so that they exert a torque on a nearby magnet for part of a rotation, but unless they swap polarity, they will exert an opposing torque for the other half of the rotation. Getting the atoms to swap polarity requires an energy input that is greater than the energy you get from the shaft torque.

2007-12-05 19:58:02 · answer #1 · answered by lithiumdeuteride 7 · 1 0

the electrical powered container on the region of any particular electron is desperate via the -one million costs of the different 7 electrons, and via the +8 charge of the nucleus. The +8 virtually consistently dominates. The action of an electron is motivated via the different electrons, whether it virtually consistently maintains to be in orbit around the nucleus. The orbit is perturbed via the different electrons. This classical view is sufficient to describe it, without getting into quantum info.

2016-12-30 09:22:40 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Sounds like a Nobel Prize if you crack it. But I wouldn't give up your day job just yet...

2007-12-05 20:12:47 · answer #3 · answered by mis42n 4 · 0 0

maybe so

2007-12-05 19:53:51 · answer #4 · answered by jesse 3 · 0 0

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