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Howcome the Proton
and the Neutron

In photon theory the proton is composed of three photon shells. Each shell is composed of a single gamma ray photon trapped in a resonant pattern to form the shell. If we could slice the sphere of a proton right through the center and view the slice edge on it might look something like the drawings below.

The shells are shown to scale in units of the innermost shell, shell four. The gamma ray photon that comprise each shell completes a pattern within the sphere in one wave length. One wave length consists of a positive and a negative half cycle. As one half cycle follows the other around the pattern, the same electrical charge of the photon remains on the outside of the shell, either positive (red) or negative (blue).

Sandwiched within shells, like charges are always face-on toward one another. Since like charges oppose each other, these face-on charges keep the structure intact by exerting outward pressure. Each saturated point must pass any certain spot on the sphere many times per second as the photon completes its pattern. The most powerful electromagnetic force that exists in nature exists at the photon's saturated points. But the points are small and they pass any certain spot around the sphere very fast. The force of the overall charge at the surface of each shell is thus watered down by the size of the spheres.

Proton shells two
three and four

Proton shells to scale
in units of shell four.

Neutron shells to scale
in units of shell four