Re: What is a photon

Liste des GroupesRevenir à s math 
Sujet : Re: What is a photon
De : chris.m.thomasson.1 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Chris M. Thomasson)
Groupes : sci.physics sci.physics.relativity
Date : 07. Jun 2025, 22:20:17
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <1022aei$3b2sg$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 6/5/2025 5:08 AM, Jan Panteltje wrote:
Am Mittwoch000004, 04.06.2025 um 10:39 schrieb Bertitaylor:
...
Experiments show that the speed of light is invariant: [...]
How is that possible if light is waves in an aether ?
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Speed of light has to be variant in the Copernican model. Light is a
wave. All waves need media to propagate. Light's medium is aether.
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A bit confused, Bertietaylor?
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Not at all.
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The Copernican model is wrong, the Sun isn't the centre of the Universe.
And in 1543 Copernicus  knew nothing about the speed of light.
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The Sun is at the centre of the solar system, of which you may have
heard. The Earth goes around the Sun. The Sun and the planets do NOT go
around the Earth in crystal spheres. Where the stars are supposedly
light from Heaven casting their light through pricks on the crystal
spheres.
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The solar system moves around the center of our home galaxy and this
galaxy around the center of our local super-cluster and that around what
only heaven knows.
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So: everything moves!
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BUT: we could use a simple trick and stop motion for at least the observer.
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This would make 'at rest' 'relative' and we could say, that all
observers are of equal rights, hence all observers are at rest. But they
are only at rest for themselves, while for any other they move.
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This means essentially the same thing: everything moves.
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That's why the universe cannot have a center (because that center would
not move).
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Also the so called 'big-bang' must be 'relative'.
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This sounds strange and unsatisfying. But I don't think so, because it
is actually much easier to understand than current standard cosmology.
 There likely have been 'many big bangs' (if those existed at all)
If you google 'penrose youtube multiple big bangs'
I do remember following some of those videos..
He presents interesting views.
 
I think so. "Our" big bang is just nothing more that a hyper large explosion, perhaps. I think so. Also, think about two galaxies merging in space. On their final point where they actually become one, aka their central super giant black holes merge, they release a final massive explosion! some sort of comic level orgasm, perhaps something was created, inside of the black hole? Perhaps? ;^) rofl. Rolling down to kook ville... ;^)

Date Sujet#  Auteur
4 Jul 25 o 

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