Sujet : Re: Relativistic aberration
De : hitlong (at) *nospam* yahoo.com (gharnagel)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativityDate : 17. Jul 2024, 13:05:26
Autres entêtes
Organisation : novaBBS
Message-ID : <277d12ea32119cb16056773223fe1a45@www.novabbs.com>
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On Wed, 17 Jul 2024 7:05:15 +0000, Thomas Heger wrote:
>
Am Dienstag000016, 16.07.2024 um 16:47 schrieb gharnagel:
>
"Why is the speed of light so slow when the universe is such a really,
really big place?" -- G. L. Harnagel
>
This is a tautology:
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What we see in the night sky is actually our own past light-cone.
Ah, but if we can develop tachyon astronomy, that will not be true!
This means: light is relatively slow for the wastness of the universe,
hence we can see everything only with a certain delay and the further
away, the longer the delay, according to x = c* t
(with x= distance in meters, t = delay in seconds).
>
This 'longer away' is usually measured in light years and the delay in
years.
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Since the night sky shows only a delayed image of past events, the speed
of light cancels out of the equations and we can put any value into it
and always get a valid picture of the universe.
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So we only assume, that light moves always with ~300 million meters per
second through the entire universe.
>
But if light would speed up or slow down, we would not be able to
measure this, because we always see the own light cone in the night sky
and c is already embedded into it (for whatever a value c actually has
in outer space).
>
TH
Ah, but the fine structure constant, which is pertinent to how stars
shine,
includes the speed of light. That implies that c is the same throughout
space and time, n'est-ce pas?