An idea that I have recently thought of, as to the nature of what works to cause the existence of Van-Der-Waals forces, is appertaining to a concept, that I call, "Static-Voltage." Back to basics: Voltage is energy per charge. Voltage often tends to exhibit a repulsion-related pressure, upon the phenomenology that is relatively adjacent to the exhibition of such said voltage. Molecules vibrate to a certain extent, and molecular vibrations are a form of energy. Molecules tend to exhibit, at a level that is here to be Poincare to being just external to their outer periphery, a tense of a "static-charge." Since molecules work to externally bear, at a general locus, that is pretty-much just external to the outer periphery of such said individually taken molecules, both a certain intrinsic resistance And a certain intrinsic Pseudo Current (due to the existence of static electricity), this will consequently tend to work to form, as well, a tense of an intrinsic voltage, -- again, at a general locus, that is pretty-much just external to the outer periphery of such said individually taken molecules. This is, in part, due to the fact, that voltage Also is here to be equal to the resistance multiplied by the current. Therefore, to me, it seems fair to say, that such a general description of a viable tense, as to what may be thought of as being of the nature of acting as "static- voltage," seems plausible, to be a definitive factor, as to what works to allow for the existence, of what are often termed of, as being "Van-Der-Waals" forces. To Be Continued! Sincerely, Sam Roach. (1989).
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