In reply to MSF's message of Mon, 13 Feb 2023 19:13:57 +0000: Hi, [snip] >That's pretty interesting. Do you imply that there might be some sort of cause >and effect relationship? Or do you think it's just an interesting coincidence?
I was surprised when the number popped out of the calculations. It makes me wonder if there is a form of balance in place. Maybe when the Oxygen in the atmosphere is reduced, water decomposes to compensate, with the Hydrogen shrinking to Hydrinos, or combining with deep carbon to form methane?? So possibly there might be a relationship. Or, perhaps related to the role that the fine structure constant plays in the relative masses of particles in the standard model? I'm really just guessing here. :) > >------- Original Message ------- >On Monday, February 13th, 2023 at 10:54 AM, Robin ><mixent...@aussiebroadband.com.au> wrote: > > >> Hi, >> >> If you multiply the weight of hydrogen in the form of water in the oceans, >> by the fine structure constant, you end up >> with the weight of Oxygen in the atmosphere. >> >> Cloud storage:- >> >> Unsafe, Slow, Expensive >> >> ...pick any three. Cloud storage:- Unsafe, Slow, Expensive ...pick any three.