Re: [Vo]:Would an antimatter apple fall up?

2008-06-13 Thread Horace Heffner
On Jun 12, 2008, at 6:56 PM, I wrote: It is also true that sufficiently large but ordinary mass black holes should be capable of emitting jets of visible matter, though it would have negative gravitational mass, and thus tend to form a spherical halo. Another is that very heavy black hol

Re: [Vo]:Would an antimatter apple fall up?

2008-06-13 Thread Horace Heffner
On Jun 12, 2008, at 8:20 PM, Jones Beene wrote: --- Horace Antimatter has ordinary charge, creates ordinary photons, interacts with magnetic fields ...out of curiosity, assuming that the photons from antimatter, even if ordinary, would be polarized differently - what about mirror matte

Re: [Vo]:Would an antimatter apple fall up?

2008-06-12 Thread Jones Beene
--- Horace > Antimatter has ordinary charge, creates ordinary photons, interacts with magnetic fields ...out of curiosity, assuming that the photons from antimatter, even if ordinary, would be polarized differently - what about mirror matter photons? You mention "symmetry is conserved" but

Re: [Vo]:Would an antimatter apple fall up?

2008-06-12 Thread Horace Heffner
On Jun 12, 2008, at 5:57 AM, OrionWorks wrote: http://space.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn14120 Based on the gravimagnetic theory I proposed: http://mtaonline.net/~hheffner/FullGravimag.pdf I seems unlikely, though possible, that antimatter will fall up. I suggested in the above articl

Re: [Vo]:Would an antimatter apple fall up?

2008-06-12 Thread Harry Veeder
On 12/6/2008 8:57 AM, OrionWorks wrote: > http://space.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn14120 <<"If I had to bet a case of champagne, I would bet that antihydrogen and hydrogen fall exactly the same," AEGIS project member Michael Doser told New Scientist. "And that's a case of champagne I'd love

[Vo]:Would an antimatter apple fall up?

2008-06-12 Thread OrionWorks
http://space.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn14120 Regards Steven Vincent Johnson www.OrionWorks.com www.zazzle.com/orionworks