When the initially stationary observer starts moving towards the light source with speed v, the frequency he measures shifts from f = c/λ to f' = (c+v)/λ:
http://www.hep.man.ac.uk/u/roger/PHY.../lecture18.pdf
"Moving Observer. Now suppose the source is fixed but the observer is moving towards the source, with speed v. In time t, ct/λ waves pass a fixed point. A moving point adds another vt/λ. So f'=(c+v)/λ."
This means that, in the frame of the moving observer, we have either
A: f' = (c+v)/λ ; c' = c+v ; λ' = λ
or
B: f' = (c+v)/λ ; c' = c ; λ' = λc/(c+v).
A is reasonable - it is valid for all kinds of waves. The only problem with A is that it is fatal for Divine Albert's Divine Theory.
B is idiotic - Einsteinians know that and never teach it explicitly. The brainwashed world would never ask how the motion of the observer manages to shift the wavelength of the incoming light from λ to λ' = λc/(c+v).
http://img15.hostingpics.net/pics/86...uletableau.jpg
Pentcho Valev