SELFPROOF 0108 - PAULI EXCLUSION PRINCIPLECURRENT PARADIGM
- The
PAULI EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE is the quantum mechanical principle that states that two or more identical fermions (particles with half-integer spin) cannot occupy the same quantum state within a quantum system simultaneously. In the case of electrons
in atoms, it can be stated as follows: it is impossible for two
electrons of a poly-electron atom to have the same values of the four quantum numbers: n, the principal quantum number, ℓ, the angular momentum quantum number, mℓ, the magnetic quantum number, and ms, the spin quantum number. For example, if two electrons reside in the same orbital,
and if their n, ℓ, and mℓ values are the same, then their ms must be
different, and thus the electrons must have opposite half-integer spins
of 1/2 and -1/2. ..... A more rigorous statement is that the total wave function for two identical fermions is antisymmetric
with respect to exchange of the particles. This means that the wave
function changes its sign if the space and spin co-ordinates of any two
particles are interchanged. (Wikipedia - 27 Feb 2012)
MALTA TEMPLATE
- Selfproof 0109: Rejectivity.
- 0102-04:
That every graviton occupies the whole of its place in space and
time and therefore has the height, width, depth, and duration of that
place in space and time.
COMMENTARY
The
Pauli Exclusion Principle is important in modern physics but
is limited in its scope. In the Malta Template it is overtaken by
the
property of rejectivity. Because the graviton is the fundamental particle,
every object made out of gravitons also has rejectivity - and because every
object in the Universe is either a graviton or an object made out of gravitons,
rejectivity applies universally although the degree and nature of its manifestation varies from one type of object to another.
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