Hi Enemyunknown,

In response to your Black hole electron question: Alexander Burinskii finds the electron to have the properties of a geon. He uses the word "microgeon".

A microgeon is a photon that is self-confined by its own gravitational field, or as J. A. Wheeler has said "--a gravitating body made entirely of electromagnetic fields--". See my user page for more info.--DonJStevens (talk) 16:42, 15 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

Hello,

Thanks a lot for the information, I will certainly look into it.

Enemyunknown (talk) 21:13, 15 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

Hello,

Reply to questions: A singularity occurs any time the electron is analyzed as a point particle. The appropriate equations used will provide nonsensicle results when the zero radius size is approached. This will occur when we use either electromagnetic energy only or mass energy only. As John C. Taylor has said, regarding a singularity "-- this is just a word to describe our ignorance".

I agree that computer simulations are the key to understanding these ideas. Confirming the real existance of the limit wavelength, 2pi (Planck length) (3/2)^1/2, should not be difficult. This is the square root of the product of the electron photon sphere circumference, 2pi (3Gm/c^2) and one half of the electron Compton wavelength, (h/2 mc).

(limit wavelength)^2 = 2pi (3Gm/c^2) (h/2 mc)

limit wavelength = (3pi hG/c^3)^1/2 = 2pi (Planck length) (3/2)^1/2

Computer simulations were used to convince Stephen Hawking that a naked singularity can exist.

I apologise for using conversational math rather than proper math format. This is an old habit that I need to change. --DonJStevens (talk) 16:52, 18 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

Regarding time: The concept that "--time is discrete is a very recent finding, it is not universally accepted and its ramifications are far from fully understood". The quote is from Talk:Planck time, Wikipedia. --DonJStevens (talk) 18:21, 19 September 2008 (UTC)Reply