12.07.2015 Views

The thorny way of truth - Free Energy Community

The thorny way of truth - Free Energy Community

The thorny way of truth - Free Energy Community

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

and function g here is dependent only on coordinates x,y,z and on velocitiesdx/dt, dy/dt, dz/dt. According to this, the equations for motionread; ("^-""^do-^^i^-'li^^ffl^ + i:^'So, elimination must taike place here first.Section 104<strong>The</strong> Connection With Ampere's LawExpression (12) in section % has been interpreted by us in such a<strong>way</strong> that the portion <strong>of</strong> the total potential <strong>of</strong> two closed currents acting oneach other that is dependent on velocities is composed by means <strong>of</strong>summation <strong>of</strong> only single potentials. <strong>The</strong> single potential is generallybased on two electric particles € and €'. So, if the question is about thepotential Dj <strong>of</strong> two currents acting on one another, then one has to combineevery particle « <strong>of</strong> one current with every particle c' <strong>of</strong> the othercurrent, form the single potential for every such combination, and thensum up all the single potentials. This is how the expression for D| inequation (13) in section 96 correctly resulted from equation (12) in thesame section and the same holds for the expression for D, in equation (5)in section 98, which came from expression (II) in the same section.If one then uses either ^ »a ftfrom Weber's fundamental law, or(2)^r ^c^rAdt dl ) ^\dt di)^\dt di ) \from Riemann's fundamental law to calculate the total interaction <strong>of</strong> allelectric particles that arc generally contained in two closed conductors at

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!