I have really found a bad thing. On the link below they talk about effective mass whewre they model the mass of the electron as a tensor instead of calculating with the forces from surrounding atoms. It looks real bad. I was planning on using the well known spring formula omega^2 = k/m and now m turns out to be a tensor!
I think it is bad physics to insert the concept of effective mass tensor. It is being detemined by measurements with various methods so it can include other effects. I think it would be better to assume that permeability and permittivity changes in space. That leads to an apparent change in electron mass since it increases the magnetic reluctance of the electron. Since the mass and charge relation of an electron is fixed it is impossible to distinguish if an apparent increase in inertia of the electron is due to mass increase or change in its magnetic field. Since mass is to be considered fixed and permeability (µ) and permittivity (€) variable I think it is better to stick to that view. I will use the classical electron mass with eventual alterations to € and µ if needed. David On Sun, Apr 24, 2011 at 3:33 PM, David Jonsson <davidjonssonswe...@gmail.com > wrote: > This might be an easy question but it is not on my mind right now. > > I would like to determine the trajectory of the electrons in plasma > oscillations: > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_oscillation > > I need this in order to find out how big an eventual magnetic field from in > can be in the case of rotating medium. > > The plasma oscillation is like a thermal vibration in the sense that > electrons go back and forth. Since the central acceleration is different in > forwards and backwards motion the orbit of the electron is not linear but > sightly elliptic and thus rotating and giving cause to a magnetic field. > > I sit in a park in Stockholm and I try to determine this effect. Winter has > ceased and there are bumble bees, wasps and butterflies flying around here. > The first ones I have seen this year. i have 4 hours battery left on the > laptop and I hope this is enough for at least some partial results. > > David > > David Jonsson, Sweden, phone callto:+46703000370 > >