Re: What is a photon

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Sujet : Re: What is a photon
De : relativity (at) *nospam* paulba.no (Paul.B.Andersen)
Groupes : sci.physics sci.physics.relativity
Date : 14. Jun 2025, 10:33:00
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <102jf7d$2evc$4@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
Den 13.06.2025 09:55, skrev Thomas Heger:
 Velocity is meant as change of distance per unit of time.
 Since 'distance' is meant as a length of a vector between two points, we need a point 'at rest' in the first place, if we like to measure velocity.
 Since we cannot use empty space itself as reference, we need to define, what we mean by 'at rest'.
 This is actually a little difficult, because 'the universe' or 'the background stars' do not provide any 'natural' anchor for position vectors.
 So, we need to take what we have and that is actually the observer himself, because observers do not move in respect to themselves.
 But: all inertial observers are of equal rights!
 That's why we could use any observer, even hypothetical observers.
 Now this would include, that we measure velocity of something from one point, which rests in respect to the object in question and from another point, which moves with velocity v.
 This would mean: that object is at rest and moving with velocity c at the same time!
 
When I drive in my car the speed of the car in front of me
relative to me is v(t) = dl(t)/dt where l(t) is the distance
between our cars. Right?
Does that mean that I am at rest and moving with velocity c
at the same time?
--
Paul
https://paulba.no/

Date Sujet#  Auteur
7 Jul 25 o 

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