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Post by Pincho Paxton on Jun 30, 2016 6:18:38 GMT
Why does friction create heat? It's an important question to physics, because when you answer the question it adds information to other questions. In my version of physics heat is an outflow of magnetism somehow different to the magnetism created by a bar magnet. Magnetism has a rainbow of physics, because magnetism creates a rainbow, and gravity must also have a rainbow of physics to be a constant with magnetism so that by adding the two together you always get the same result. Gravity flows towards points, and is cold to create snowflakes that lock by directional flow that strings beads of water together.
Friction is the inflow of gravity stringing together quantum beads of magnetism in a lock, and release fashion.
You can change gravity to magnetism by trapping gravity, or causing it to collide with itself.
I do not feel that I have 100% all of the theory for friction heat, just about 90%.
Pincho Paxton
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Post by Pincho Paxton on Jun 30, 2016 6:47:00 GMT
I think that I have figured out the other 10%. The stringing of magnetic beads by gravity is much like a fishing float sticking out of the water. If you combine the fishing float with a lens that magnifies the sun's heat towards a point (One of the fun things that you do at school!) you get this...
You imagine 10000 fishing floats on the water, and they represent the surface of a material that you create friction over. So all of the fishing floats are brushed across by your hand, and they wobble. Now you can get areas that point together like the lens that magnifies the sun, and all of those points create gravity collisions, and gravity collisions create magnetic outflows which are heat.
So that is the other 10%.
Pincho Paxton
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