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The Behavior of Charged Particles
in Ordinary Space
By: Thomas Lee Abshier, ND
- Particle pairs with like-charges (e.g. electron-electron or positron-positron) cannot
occupy the same point in space because of their charge repulsion. The electrons
of one orbital will repel the electrons of another orbital, which enables the effect
of rebound and momentum transfer in macroscopic mass collisions. But, electrons
and positrons can combine (as seen in pair annihilation). When matter and antimatter
combine, they convert their mass into a pair of gamma rays that leave in opposite
directions. The Pauli Exclusion Principle dictates that electrons must have an opposite
spin if they are to occupy an orbital with the same quantum number. This phenomenon,
as well as all quantum orbital states, is probably due to resonance states that are
established by a complex interaction of the Fields emitted by the nucleus and the
orbital electron.