Rationale for Frohlich Oscillations
- From: "Borne" <thorborne@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 5 Jan 2006 16:06:06 -0800
Hi, Sci.physics.electromag,
Anyone familiar with the work of Dr. Herbert Frohlich?
What's the rationale for the so called Frohlich Coherence?
Basically. It is described thus: "that if two large molecules are
capable
of giant dipole vibrations at certain frequencies and if the mediums
separating them has appropriate dielectric properties, resonance-like
interactions many take place, even if the molecules are far apart. The
mechanism involves longitudinal vibratory modes, which can be stables
in large molecules. Once a molecule becomes strongly excited. It may
tend to continue to vibrate because it cannot lose energy by emitting
radiation. In principle, there can be persistent long-range
phase-correlated motions (coherent vibrations), especially in
molecules that are strongly polar, as many biomolecules are"
How do you relate it to mainstream physics, is it supported?
Tnx. Borne
.
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