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You should read the section “Introducing The Key Ring Atom” and
“Introducing The Key Ring Molecules” before continuing this
section.
For a model of a molecule to work it must provide at least these
7 functions. We dealt with 1 through 5 in the previous
section. We will be dealing with only parts of function 5 or
the connecting of molecules to other molecules.
1. It must be the mechanism by which gravity works.
2. It must hold the atom and the molecule together.
3. It must be able to provide or change into all the energy
particles that come out when the atom/molecule is split.
4. It must have a logical unit that determines it’s mass.
5. It must be able to connect or not connect to other elements.
6. It must provide the mechanism for hot and cold. (In another
section).
7. It must provide the mechanism of adhesion between molecules.
(In another section).
Under the section “Introducing the Key Ring Molecules” we have a
model of Hydrogen and a model of Oxygen. We are going to connect
2 Hydrogen atoms to 1 Oxygen atom. How do we do this? It’s the
same way you chain things together. Just add a link in a
chain. What will we use for the link? We will use what we
already have. We will use an electron ring. All one has to do
is just share an electron ring. I have an illustration below.
It is H20 or water. The proton rings of the Oxygen are purple.
The electron rings are red. The proton rings of the Hydrogen
are green. There are 2 shared electron rings that are light
blue. You can see the shared electron rings between each
Hydrogen atom and each end of the Oxygen molecule. This is the
chemical bond that holds the water molecule together. It is
very simple
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Illustration of
Water The New Way, H2O |
The next compound is Carbon Dioxide or CO2. To build Carbon
Dioxide we will take 1 Carbon molecule and 2 Oxygen molecules.
The proton rings of the Carbon are black. The proton rings of
the Oxygen molecules are purple. The electron rings of all
molecules are red. The shared electron rings for both are light
blue. An illustration is below. To build the Carbon Dioxide
compound, we connect the 2 ends of the first Oxygen molecule to
2 legs on the Carbon molecule. Then we connect the other 2 ends
of the remaining Oxygen molecule to the remaining 2 legs of the
Carbon molecule. The shared electron rings hold the Carbon
Dioxide compound together. It’s that simple.
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Illustration of Carbon
Dioxide, CO2 |
In my book there are illustrations of Oxygen(O2), Ozone(O3),
Diamond(C4), Ammonia(NH3), Nitrous Oxide(N2O), Nitrogen(N2),
Silicon Dioxide(SiO2) and Silicon Oxide(Si4O4). They all show
how the molecules connect using the shared electron ring.
Why do some elements connect and others don’t? It will have a
lot to do with the configuration of each molecule. One reason
is how long the legs are. Another is the twist at the end of the
legs. For the shared electron ring to work the proton rings
should be side by side. Twists will make the shared electron
ring hard to combine or make a connection weak. How does this
model work chemically? The same as what is taught in school.
One atom gives up an electron and the other provides the one
that is shared.
Below is an illustration of Water (H20) with the standard models
of the atom. Atoms are believed to share an electron. This
shared electron is what I didn’t “get” in school. I didn’t
understand this. It did not make sense to me that a shared ball
would hold each element together. It looked to me that the
electron would have to make figure 8’s. I could find nothing in
nature to compare this to. Two planets don’t share a moon.
You can’t hook your dog up to a dog house with a figure 8ing
ball. It just doesn’t work. Models of this type are extremely
hard to make. This is one of the reasons why I think the
geometry of the standard model is wrong.
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Illustration of
Water - The Old Way, H2O |
With the model of the key ring compound it’s just another link
in a chain. We use similar chains everywhere. We hold jewelry
around our neck. We can pull a car out of a ditch with a
chain. We can chain a dog to a dog house. It is something we
use everywhere. Links in chains can be formed or broken.
Models of the key ring compounds are pretty easy to make. My
children in grade school, junior high, and senior high have all
made them. I will be posting these pictures soon. I think the
geometry of the key ring atoms, the key ring molecules and the
key ring compounds is right.
Next I will be dealing with function 6 and 7.
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