OXiA DoMiNo )( work.eDit )( scar.joha.vers. )(
N.TesLa had a debate in a scientific periodicaL with J.J.Thomson
about their experiments with certain vacuum tubes.
In an articLe of tHe ELectricaL EngineeR Magazine
titled
“Electric Discharge in Vacuum Tubes”
01.07.1891
“To account for its apparently small mass, science conceives the electron as a hollow sphere, a sort of bubble. Now, a bubble can exist in such a medium as a gas or liquid because its internal pressure is not altered by deformation. But if, as supposed, the internal pressure of an electron is due to the repulsion of electric masses, the slightest conceivable deformation must result in the destruction of the bubble! ... +++... Just to mention another improbability, the force tending to tear an electron apart is, in pounds per square inch, represented by the staggering figure of 256,899 followed by twenty-one zeros — and this is 513,798,000,000,000,000,000 times greater that the tension that tungsten wire can withstand! And yet it does not burst! Not even when it is hurled against an obstacle with a speed hundreds of thousands times greater than that of a bullet!”–Nikola Tesla
“A Famous Prophet of Science Looks Into the Future.” Popular Science Monthly, November, 1928.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tvrtko_I_of_Bosnia#/media/File:Relikvi%C3%A1%C5%99_sv._Simeona_detail.png



ДНК))))DNA((((
))))14th century(((( onna 5531 = anno 1355
"Serbia reached its zenith under Stefan Dušan, who expanded the state, declared himself Emperor, and laid the groundwork for a Serbian Empire. However, internal strife and the rising Ottoman threat led to the empire's fragmentation and ultimate fall after the Battle of Kosovo in 1389."






"Elizabeth Tudor was just fourteen when Thomas Seymour, her stepfather, began paying her the kind of attention that made the people around her uneasy. He was in his late thirties, strikingly handsome, and dangerously ambitious. After marrying Elizabeth’s stepmother, Catherine Parr, he moved into the household where Elizabeth lived, and it wasn’t long before boundaries began to blur.
He would visit Elizabeth’s chambers early in the morning, tickling her, sometimes even climbing into her bed while she was still in her nightgown. Catherine Parr initially brushed it off, even joining in on these games, but soon the playful visits turned into something more disturbing. Servants witnessed Thomas embracing Elizabeth, cutting her gown to pieces while she wore it, and behaving in ways that could not be explained away as harmless fun. Elizabeth, intelligent and watchful even as a teenager, found herself in an impossible position: she knew she needed to protect herself, but she also knew how dangerous it was to cross a powerful man.
Eventually, Catherine caught them alone together and could no longer pretend it was a harmless game. Elizabeth was sent away for her own safety, and just a few months later, Catherine died in childbirth, leaving Thomas a widower and Elizabeth vulnerable once more. Thomas began plotting to marry Elizabeth, hoping to use her position to seize more power for himself. But his schemes finally caught up with him, and he was arrested for treason. During the investigation, Elizabeth was questioned for days, her honor and safety hanging in the balance, but she never wavered under the intense pressure.
Thomas Seymour was executed, leaving Elizabeth to carry the weight of the scandal into her adulthood. It was a defining moment in her life, teaching her about the dangers of power-hungry men, the necessity of controlling her image, and the price of trust in a world that could turn on her in an instant."