Sujet : Scalar waves De : ttt_heg (at) *nospam* web.de (Thomas Heger) Groupes :sci.physics.relativity Date : 28. Apr 2024, 06:46:54 Autres entêtes Message-ID :<l96663F16l9U1@mid.individual.net> User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
Hi Ng I had read recently something from Tom Bearden. He wrote, that scalar waves are longitudinal waves, which vary in velocity and are acompanied by a wave, which runs backwards in time. The idea is a little strange and would require to give up the constancy of the speed of light in vacuum, but to allow a variation of the speed of light in vacuum. This would cause a wavelike behavior, but longitudinal (opposite to classical em-waves). This behaviour was called 'polarized in the time-domain'. Is this somehow correct? (The 'backwards in time wave' is actually no prblem for me, because I had assumed something similar before.) TH