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Magnon magnetic vibrations are at the heart of electric light rather than electrons.



It was thought until recently that electricity was created by the movement of electrons around a circuit. This worked fine for batteries but AC required a way to transfer energy across an isolation transformer where the primary electrons never touch the secondary winding electrons.  We also know that electricity moves at nearly the speed of light, and as electrons are particles they would need a massive amount of energy to achieve this.

So we need to rethink how we can transmit electric light energy using magnons rather than electrons. As domestic electricity is alternating current [AC] it is really just a low frequency electromagnetic energy but subject to the same laws and restrictions as radio waves and sunlight rays.   

  To try and reconcile these requirements it is much easier to consider that magnons are at the inside heart of all types of electromagnetic vibrational energy which when introduced into matter molecules vibrates the inner nuclear magnetic moment and thus increase its temperature/pressure characteristics. To this end I wrote a blog on magnoflux     http://electricmagnofluxuniverse.blogspot.com/


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  • There is a tendency to believe that through history the accumulation of human knowledge has been linear, while in reality it has been lumpy and with many reversals as various groups have risen to dominance and then fallen. It is important also to realise that modern interconnectedness is just that, modern, and is the exception rather than the rule.


    So, at the time your average stone age man in the UK was looking at building Stonehenge, he would have been unaware of the existence of the Greeks who were his contemporaries, let alone folk in other places who had come and gone centuries before like  the builders of the pyramids in Egypt who had already had a bronze age of sorts.

    It may very well be that someone in the middle ages thought the earth was flat (someone may think it even now!!), but equally in other places some folk knew otherwise a long time before.
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  • There is a tendency to believe that through history the accumulation of human knowledge has been linear, while in reality it has been lumpy and with many reversals as various groups have risen to dominance and then fallen. It is important also to realise that modern interconnectedness is just that, modern, and is the exception rather than the rule.


    So, at the time your average stone age man in the UK was looking at building Stonehenge, he would have been unaware of the existence of the Greeks who were his contemporaries, let alone folk in other places who had come and gone centuries before like  the builders of the pyramids in Egypt who had already had a bronze age of sorts.

    It may very well be that someone in the middle ages thought the earth was flat (someone may think it even now!!), but equally in other places some folk knew otherwise a long time before.
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