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![]() "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message news ![]() On 4 May 2007 04:03:17 -0700, George Dishman wrote: On 4 May, 10:33, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On 4 May 2007 00:26:21 -0700, George Dishman wrote: On 4 May, 03:36, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On Fri, 4 May 2007 00:21:07 +0100, "George Dishman" wrote: "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message My question was, "what intrinsic property of an individual photon produces a sensation of a 'frequency'? No it wasn't, the question was what is the definition of frequency and that is what I explained above. I have restored what you cut trying to cover it up. In other words, what aspect of photon structure 'oscillates'? A photon has no structure so nothing oscillates in it. Hahahaha! What makes a photon different from anything else then George? It has different intrinsic properties. How can anything have 'intrinsic properties' (which can be measured in 3space1time) if it doesn't have a 'structure'? Consider some entity A. It is made of entities B and C. A has properties which come from the properties of B and C plus some influence from the relationship between B and C. For example the mass of A might be the sum of the masses of B and C plus the binding energy of the pair. As you go down the scale, eventually you come to something fundamental which is not composed of other things, and yet it must have some properties of its own. I think you just enjoy arguing, George. Probably, but what I said is still valid. I expected you to reply that an electron is a fundamental particle yet string theory says it has structure - a ring of energy. My reply would be that "ring-like" is a property rather than indicative of construction from lesser items. Quite often I feel words can be ambiguous and exploring alternative meanings for, in this case, "structure" can be useful in clarifying what we mean. Location is a continuous variable. It is not possible to calculate exactly where a photon will land given an experimental setup, you can only calculate the probability as a function of location. That is an intrinsic property of all particles. George, if a thousand bullets are fired at a target, the way they are distributed around the bull follows an established statistical law. Yes, and that is true even if the gun is locked into position. However, if single ONE bullet is fired at the target, it has zero probability of landing anywhere other than at the point where the gun was aimed. (please don't mention wind shear) No, it has exactly the same probability of landing at any location as each of the thousand. No it doesn't!!!!!! Yes it does, that is basic probability theory. Probability is not a cause of anything. It's a result. Nobody said anything about probability being causal. All those bullets that were normally distributed around the bull landed exactly where they did for purely physical reasons. Where the bullet will strike is precisely determined BEFORE it is fired. Even factors like the nerve movements of the shooter and the wind movements are precisely predetermined. There is no way anyone could produce a mathematical model to predict the outcome but it is still theoretically possible. Statistics is the most misinterpreted science of all.... Indeed, though your mistake above is less common than others. The key here is that the pprobability for each bullet is unaffected by the existence of any preceding shot. That is not related to my statement. You said that a thosand bullets would be spread but a single bullet would not, hence the implication is that the first bullet always goes where it is aimed and subsequent bullets go elsewhere because of the previous one(s). That is not the case, the first bullet has as much chance of landing at some off-centre point as any other. It is similar to tossing an unbiassed coin, the probability is 50:50 regardless of the outcome of preceding tosses, only the variable is 2D real (location on the target) rather than binary (heads or tails). Yes I know that George. Then why did you say "No it doesn't!!!!!!" ? If you drop a thousand ball bearings on the floor they will end up normally distributed around the centre....BUT that does not alter the fact thta there was a precise physical reason why every one came to rest right where it did. Mostly, the scatter is dominated by slight variations at the macroscopic level, but a small amount of uncertainty is also an intrinsic property of any individual particle so if you repeat that with electrons there is a lower limit of spread beyond that from the lack of perfect knowledge. Einstein didn't like that but it has been proven experimentally beyond any doubt. Newton's clockwork and fully deterministic universe isn't ours. No, the 'traveling oscillation' model is the macroscopic equivalent for a group of photons. That's also true....but it is a different package. Just the aggregate, The way I see it is that a monochromatic beam is just a large number of identical photons with that particular 'wavelength'. Yes. A grating deflects an individual photon depending on the colour of that beam, not the rate at which photons arrive. I'm thinking of say a dim red laser with a flux of a few photons per minute. Like the coin tosses, each one is deflected purely on its intrinsic properties. White light is a mixture. Yes. When it hits a grating each photon deflects depending only on its own properties and not the properties of other photons that arrive some seconds earlier or later. A radio signal is a mixture in which groups of individual photons form sine shaped 'bunches' which move along. ..somewhat like a water wave except the photons move back and forth rather than up and down. No, radio is no different to light, it just has much lower energy per photon. Consider microwaves hitting a wire grid. Each photon in the wave is deflected by an angle that depends only on its own properties independent of any others. This has given me an idea. Do the individual photons move or remain at basically the same location? I'll have to make an animation of this. It is not a theory, it is logically obvious, the energy cannot be dumped in two different places at the same time. George, there are two alternatives. The energy/unit volume of an RF signal can be the sum of all the h.nu energy of individual photons in that volume. ...or it could be something like 2pi^2.h.A^2.f^3/c... Sure, I expect the formula to be different in BaTh, but the argument still holds, that energy is deposited where the photon lands, not somehwere else. That's probably OK for monochromatic light but you can't deduce that the same will apply to, say, RF. They are both just EM, all the rules must apply to everything from ELF at a few Hz up to gamma rays. You don't know if the photon that enters the PM is the same one that was incident on the grating. One is absorbed and another emitted. It makes no difference. Anyway, we know the classical theory of gratings.. I don't think you do, you can't even work out whether speed appears in the BaTh equations for a grating. This argument is not about how gratings behave according to BaTh. Of course it is. The BaTh doesn't need gratings to verify it. BaTh needs a version of the grating equation. Working that out will tell you about the rules for dealing with reflection in BaTh which is something you currently don't know. Once you do that you could apply it to Sagnac's experiment without having to assume all the mirrors are at the same radius as you do at present. I don't know what the lowest frequency of individual detected photons is. However, grating methods are applied at RF regularly and work fine. The photons carry the energy and the energy goes where the wave equations say it will therefore so do the photons. Water waves carry longitudinal energy...but the individual molecules go up and down. Their vertical KE is NOT what is carried with the wave. The wave energy is deposited where the waves lap the shore, not somewhere else. But the energy of the vertically oscillating water molecules is continuously being dampened out and absorbed as heat in the ocean. Yes, and the heat is deposited at the location of the wave, not elsewhere. Nobody knows that actual role of individual photons in this process. Yes we do, from the optical behaviour. EM is the same whether high frequency or low and gratings work as well at microwave as they do in the infra-red. So they should. They are wavelength dependent. Wavelength and/or frequency. Since nobody has a clue what photon 'wavelength' or 'frequency' actually signify, that is a pretty meaningless statement. Speak for yourself. So why don't you know what they do? A grating reflects an incident wave to a particular point on a screen along Huygens. Exactly, the place where the energy lands on the screen is controlled by the intrinsic property of the individual photons, but it is also where Huygens' method says it will land, hence the wavelength and/or frequency of each photon must be the same as the macroscopic wave, hence K=1. Here's another analogy. The cars on the highway are made of rubber and all carry a heavy positive surface charge. What do you think happens to their lengths as they slow down and speed up in different speed zones? I think when the charge is taken to some destination, the car also arrives at the same place. You can't send the car to Boston and have the charge arrive in Cairo which is what you are suggesting. Beyond that discussions of their length are irrelevant, the length has no analog in the photon. How do you know. Because your suggestion is equivalent to saying the heat produced by friction in an ocean wave can be deposited inland. Henry, I think we have maybe got a handle on this, in your grating equation of you have red laser light arriving at a level of one photon per second, would you use the frequency of the red light or the 1Hz rate of one photon per second to work out the deflection angle. I say it is that of the light regardless of the arrival rate, you are telling me the wave energy goes to one place at an angle determined by the 1Hz figure while the photons themselves go to the location given by the red light frequency. The concept matches the data very well. It makes no sense though, how can the energy go anywhere other than where the photons go? George |
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On May 3, 6:21 pm, "George Dishman" wrote:
I don't know what the lowest frequency of individual detected photons is. Superconducting detectors based on the breaking of quasiparticle Cooper pairs by absorbed photons go down to the submillimeter wave range. http://www.yale.edu/proberlab/Papers..._eucas2003.pdf There was a Scientific American article on these devices last year, but darned if I can find my copy...I think it was the one with autism as the featured cover story. Jerry |
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![]() "Jerry" wrote in message oups.com... On May 3, 6:21 pm, "George Dishman" wrote: I don't know what the lowest frequency of individual detected photons is. Superconducting detectors based on the breaking of quasiparticle Cooper pairs by absorbed photons go down to the submillimeter wave range. http://www.yale.edu/proberlab/Papers..._eucas2003.pdf There was a Scientific American article on these devices last year, but darned if I can find my copy...I think it was the one with autism as the featured cover story. Fascinating paper Jerry, thanks ![]() It appears it could go as low as the Al limit at 100GHz or 3mm wavelength which would easily allow a macroscopic wire grid to be used as a diffraction grating. George |
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On Sat, 5 May 2007 01:48:14 +0000 (UTC), bz
wrote: HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote in news ![]() 4ax.com: A radio signal is a mixture in which groups of individual photons form sine shaped 'bunches' which move along. ..somewhat like a water wave except the photons move back and forth rather than up and down. An unmodulated radio signal is monchromatic. The photons are phase and frequency coherent. The photons travel outward from the antenna. Have you ever trapped an individual RF photon? This has given me an idea. Do the individual photons move or remain at basically the same location? I'll have to make an animation of this. Photons move at c. Wrt what? They do NOT remain at the same location. www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm Einstein's Relativity - the greatest HOAX since jesus christ's virgin mother. |
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On Sat, 5 May 2007 08:22:29 +0100, "George Dishman"
wrote: "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message .. . On 4 May 2007 01:41:03 -0700, George Dishman wrote: On 4 May, 00:35, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: ... No George, have another look at:www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/efdrag.jpg The peak velocity curve is in phase with the peak brightness curve, which in in phase with hte eclipses. I had another look Henry, it is a fake again! The top is a cut-off ellipse and you have then drawn a number of dots along the actual curve by hand. Of course. Show a screen capture from your program, state the orbital parameters and _copy_ the curve onto a composite diagram like mine showing both luminosity and velocity curves with the correct relative phasing: http://www.georgedishman.f2s.com/Henri/EF_Dra.png You are a charlatan Henry, a plain old fraud. George, my diagram was never supposed to be accurate. It was merely demonstrating the basic idea. I will make a more accurate one for you if you like. You have your program for precisely this purpose. Use it to match the velocity curve of one star, post a screengrab of the green curve and the orbital parameters as you have before. Then add 180 to the yaw and scale the velocity to get the second star and see if you can match its velocity curve. Post that too. Then show how you take account of the reductions due to eclipsing and show the total. Don't sketch what you would like, instead plot the sum using a spreadsheet or something similar. Here is the combined curve of both stars (without the eclipse) the details are shown. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/efdra.jpg George www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm Einstein's Relativity - the greatest HOAX since jesus christ's virgin mother. |
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On Sat, 5 May 2007 01:36:57 +0000 (UTC), bz
wrote: HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote in : Monochromatic light is made up of many identical photons, all with intrinsic 'absolute wavelengths' of whatever the main beam exhibits. An RF signal is made from many possibly varied photons, the intrinsic wavelengths of which are not the same as the 'absolute wavelength' of the signal. The RF signal from a CW transmitter is monochromatic. the signals might be but what of the photons that make up the signal? www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm Einstein's Relativity - the greatest HOAX since jesus christ's virgin mother. |
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Henri Wilson a écrit :
Here is the combined curve of both stars (without the eclipse) the details are shown. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/efdra.jpg You could, even if getting worse in physics and general computing, improve your GUI programing. |
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HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote in
: On Sat, 5 May 2007 01:48:14 +0000 (UTC), bz wrote: HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote in news ![]() 4ax.com: A radio signal is a mixture in which groups of individual photons form sine shaped 'bunches' which move along. ..somewhat like a water wave except the photons move back and forth rather than up and down. An unmodulated radio signal is monchromatic. The photons are phase and frequency coherent. The photons travel outward from the antenna. Have you ever trapped an individual RF photon? Yep. (prove me wrong!) ![]() This has given me an idea. Do the individual photons move or remain at basically the same location? I'll have to make an animation of this. Photons move at c. Wrt what? Any inertial FoR in SR, the source [and very quickly any inertial FoR] in the ballistic theory of light, and in the Wilson Aether in Henri's BaTh tub. They do NOT remain at the same location. -- bz please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an infinite set. remove ch100-5 to avoid spam trap |
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HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote in
: On Sat, 5 May 2007 01:36:57 +0000 (UTC), bz wrote: HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote in m: Monochromatic light is made up of many identical photons, all with intrinsic 'absolute wavelengths' of whatever the main beam exhibits. An RF signal is made from many possibly varied photons, the intrinsic wavelengths of which are not the same as the 'absolute wavelength' of the signal. The RF signal from a CW transmitter is monochromatic. the signals might be but what of the photons that make up the signal? They are phase and frequency coherent, just like photons from a laser. Better actually than most lasers as most have some multimode contributions to their output. www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm Einstein's Relativity - the greatest HOAX since jesus christ's virgin mother. -- bz please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an infinite set. remove ch100-5 to avoid spam trap |
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On Sat, 5 May 2007 08:50:53 +0100, "George Dishman"
wrote: "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message Well it could go on for a little time after emission. Yes, the speed equalisation distance that you already include in your program. No. The intra-photonic movement settles down long before the inter-photonic movement does. (Note: two new Wilsonian terms) Understood but pointless, they are the same thing. George, why don't you accept the fact that even today, nobody has the faintest idea of what a photon actually is. But we don't agree that the rate within a photon is far greater than the rate BETWEEN photons. The rate is fixed by your speed equalisation factor. The inside of a photon has completely different properties from the space between photons. Why should the two be the same? Space has only one set of properties. Ballistic theory says the speed is c+v tending towards c and that theory applies to all the waves in your photon packet. George, when you talk about the speed of anything you must always provide a reference. You should know that by now. Ballistic theory says the speed of EM is INITIALLY c wrt its source and c+v wrt an object moving at -v wrt the source...... what happens to the light during travel is not really part of the basic theory although we now suspect that it experiences speed changes and speed unification.... So are many orbit periods. No orbital periods are more stable and don't show the discontinuous phase changes of Cepheids. There are plenty of complex orbit systems that would cause that effect. Nope, you can't gete a nice consistent value for years with step discontinuities. George, our own sun moves in a complex orbit around its barycentre with all the planets. Those small anomalies would show up in its brightness curve 50000 LYs away. There can also be a long term Vdoppler shift caused by a whole cepheid system being in a long period orbit around a galactic centre or similar. Sure, proper motion is significant but again it cannot produce phase steps. They are not very common. Most variable stars have extremely stable periods....highly suggestive that an orbit is unvolved. You would be better to look in a textbook. ROFL, that's always your answer Henry, if you can't cope, bury your head. Burn the book. Exactly :-) Their main job is to amplify very weak light signals. A single photon could barely be seen above the noise. ********, see these stills: It's not ******** George. PMs were initially used to amplify very weak light signals. The idea that individual detections "could barely be seen above the noise" is ********, the detectors are far less noisy than you imagine. That is obvious in the stills. They aren't photons. They're electrons.. The fact that the principle can be used to detect single photons is an added bonus. http://ophelia.princeton.edu/~page/single_photon.html There is no PM in this experiment. "The Hamamatsu camera is a remarkable device. In essence, it has two successive micro-channel plates followed by a CCD chip." What do you think that is then? It accelerates single electrons, emitting photon bursts. These are what the thing sees. Required for self-consistency Henry, see the grating discussion above. Not required at all. Explained above... Sorry Henry, wittering about rubber cars or something which conflicts with your own equations isn't an "explanation". It's a simple demonstration of the principle involved. It doesn't demonstrate BaTh, but a self-contradictory alternative. Just because you can write a story about rubber cars, it doesn't mean translating it into a picture of photons will work. In this case it doesn't. George, you keep telling me I have to match observed data. If I assume K is 1, nothing matches. If I assume it has a value of maybe 10000, then everything falls into place, I can match hundreds of brightness curves in phase and magnitude with velocity curves. George, this is how exepriment physics operates. If K is not = 1, then all data is matched. What is the logical conclusion? Yes, so? What is the BaTh equation? I don't knw....How long does the contact last? So there you are you see, you don't have any equation so you don't know whether speed appears in it or not. The FREQUENCY of wavecrest arrival is what the BaTh uses. You just said you didn't know what the equation is Henry, you have no idea what it will use, and since frequency is just speed / wavelength, any equation that uses frequency can equally well be written using speed and wavelength. You really need to find out what your equation is before you make a bigger fool of yourself. George, I can say whatever I like and you can't prove me wrong. Nobody has moved a grating in remote space at significant speed wrt a source and so there is no data to compare it with. As for the HST, well we don't know whether it is outside the local EM FoR....and we don't really know if the diffraction angles change with its orbit phase. I just hope your desperation is not going to cause you to make stupid elementary errors like this. THE BLOODY BRIGHTNESS PEAK IS EXACTLY IN PHASE WITH THE CENTRE OF THE ECLIPSE. Yes, but the observed velocity peak is exactly between the eclipses, and the period of the orbit is double the period of the eclipses giving a 45 degree error. Oh, Ok. I wasn't looking at that. Yes that's interesting...and backs up my theory that unification is pretty quick near short period binaries and also that K 1. It means there is still enough ADoppler to account for the brightness variation although the individual photons are essentially VDoppler shifted. Which is the BaTh prediction. Wrong. If you had used you program instead of faking your results, you would have found that yourself. Well you can see a better curve now. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/efdra.jpg It is contradictory, it would have the same photons landing in two different places. Monochromatic light is made up of many identical photons, all with intrinsic 'absolute wavelengths' of whatever the main beam exhibits. Right, the 'wavelength' of the photons is what determines the grating deflection angle. ....and that 'wavelength' cannot possibly change just because the GRATING moves. An RF signal is made from many possibly varied photons, the intrinsic wavelengths of which are not the same as the 'absolute wavelength' of the signal. Of course they are the same Henry. I think you are confusing photon arrival rate with the intrinsic properties. If you look at a dim light source and you see one photon arriving per second on average, that doesn't mean the light has a frquency of 1Hz. You said above: The FREQUENCY of wavecrest arrival is what the BaTh uses. You can't seriously be trying to tell me you would put 1Hz into the BaTh equation for the grating deflection, are you? I certainly gave you credit for more understanding than that. The grating angle depends on the colour of the light, not how many photons per second arrive. That's OK for light....but not for generated radio waves. You can't realy believe that a constant RF signal lasting ten years is made of one single photon. So what's the difference George? Are you going to offer any suggestions? Tell me, what is the relationship between an constant RF sine wave and a photon? Nope, the result would be an extreme broadening of spectral lines which isn't displayed in any way. Most is unified before it leaves the star's influence. Try the sums. I think that's how the page on Sekerin gets the speed equaisation distance of ~5 microns (from memory). Certainly that would be "before it leaves the star's influence." :-) That's great! It ensures that thermal molecular speeds are neutralised and that all light leaves the star at exactly c wrt that star. Thanks again George. Yep, it also mean ADoppler is non-existent for binaries, the light changes to speed c within 4.6 microns of leaving the star's surface ;-) That's c wrt the star George. However, I agree, it also appears to quite rapidly approach 'c' wrt the BARYCENTRE of the pair in the case of pulsars and short period binaries. This again raises the question, "how and why does unification rate depend on period?" Speed equalization wasn't part of the theory he was commenting on so he was right. AFAIK that bodge was added after he was dead so he didn't comment on it at all. Extinction refuted his arguments. Extinction woluld not be required if his argument was incorrect. He was right and Ritzian theory had to be abandoned. Some cranks tried to add extinction but it doesn't work. De Sitter was wrong.. face it George. He was right, or you wouldn't need extinction. I can live with extinction. De Sitter couldn't. ...and no other experiment refutes the BaTh. Sagnac and Shapiro do. Other factors are involved. I would also add that he probably used grossly inflated velocity figures, based on VDoppler instead of ADoppler. I would also add that I have corrected you on that stupid and uninformed statement three times now. George www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm Einstein's Relativity - the greatest HOAX since jesus christ's virgin mother. |
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