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<DIV>Actually, by the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, you could never know
exactly when only one electron was added. If you knew the specific moment, then
you can never know if it is zero electrons, or a large amount. There's
a probability function of it being there as a unit, and it is either there (one
unit), or not there (zero units). Position can only be determined over
some time span range that allows statistics to take effect. The electron can be
considered a particle or a wave function depending on the time
frame. Quantum mechanics are generally outside our daily experience, so it
seems weird. But the electrons probably think we are weird :O) Oh
yeah, it is real, not a theory. We are just so big that we live in a world of
averages.</DIV>
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<DIV>-Karl.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>In a message dated 5/14/2005 2:17:01 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
sounddoctorin@imt.net writes:</DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE
style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: blue 2px solid"><FONT
style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: transparent" face=Arial color=#000000
size=2>Heheh. Yeah it's just that..the charge on an individual electron
is 1.6 <BR>x 10^-19 coulumb....which so SO small...and while if you are
talking <BR>about two metal sphere's electrostatic charge..well yeah...you add
<BR>another electron and the charge bumps up a 'digit', neglecing the
<BR>interspacing effect which is extremely negligable of course in this
<BR>instance..but still..so is what you are saying so I thought you should
<BR>know about it :-). </FONT></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV>
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