[Physics] How Does Light "Know" How Fast to Travel?

kostadinos at aol.com kostadinos at aol.com
Thu Oct 27 03:07:18 CEST 2016


Hi Norm,

In my Chapter "The Thermodynamics in Planck's Law" [ https://www.researchgate.net/publication/221918833_The_Thermodynamics_in_Planck%27s_Law] I prove the following proposition mathematically.

"If the speed of light is constant, then light propagates as a wave"

Thus, Einstein's Constant Speed of Light hypothesis contradicts his Photon Hypothesis.

But that is not all that is inconsistent in Modern Physics. The Second Law of Thermodynamics requires that any physical event have a positive non-zero duration of time to occur.  Thus, Spacetime contradicts Thermodynamics.

Best wishes,

Constantinos

kostadinos at aol.com

On Wednesday, October 26, 2016 Norm Silliman <silliman at mindsync.com> wrote:
I am suggesting a new subject topic for this group.

How Does Light "Know" How Fast to Travel?:- This question arises from the
fact that the velocity of light is independent of the velocity of its 
source.
Under the interpretation of reality provided by Special Relativity, 
light is
considered to consist of particles called photons which travel 
ballistically
through empty space. Under the interpretation provided by the Aether 
Relativity
Theory, light consists of packets of electromagnetic vibrations 
transmitted

through a medium called the Aether. Since one would expect the
velocity of ballistic particles to be affected by the velocity of their 
source,
Special Relativity would seem to be incapable of dealing with this question.
The Aether Relativity Theory, on the other hand, has no 
difficulty. The
velocity of propagation of a vibration in a medium is determined by the 
properties
of the medium and is independent of the velocity of its source.

Busy minds want to know,

Norm


_______________________________________________
Physics mailing list
Physics at tuks.nl
http://mail.tuks.nl/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/physics
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mail.tuks.nl/pipermail/physics/attachments/20161026/d80d65d0/attachment.html>


More information about the Physics mailing list