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On how proton radius shrinkage can be connected with Lorentz factor violation
Author(s) -
Wladimir Guglinski
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
international journal of fundamental physical sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2231-8186
DOI - 10.14331/ijfps.2018.330114
Subject(s) - spins , excited state , physics , spin (aerodynamics)
Views Several new experimental findings have shown that atomic nuclei cannot have a similar structure of that adopted in the Standard Nuclear Physics (SNP), because there are insurmountable obstacles to be transposed. Nuclear theorists have tried to explain some of the misfires with bizarre theories, but there is a failure impossible to be explained by any theoretical attempt, and such failure impossible to be solved represents the definitive proof that SNP works through wrong foundations. The failure comes from the excited isotopes carbon-12, oxygen-16, Argon-36, calcium-40, and calcium-42. All them with spin 2, have null magnetic moments, but this is impossible because it’s any combination of spins from which those excited isotopes, with spin 2, may have a null magnetic moment, if we try to explain it with any of the current nuclear models of the SNP. And the unavoidable conclusion is that it’s impossible to eliminate the inconsistencies of the SNP by keeping its current fundamental premises.

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