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Painius I get your angle analysis and it fits. So would a star moving
away from us with less light intensity(already shinning closer to red(kind of pink white) Also mass density of star.as it radiates white light but its great gravity changes photons to be longer and longer lengths in their great journey to hit our eyes. TreBert PS Wave lengths of photons tell us a lot ,but to measure each photon wave accurately is ???? |
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On Feb 2, 5:22*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Painius I get your angle analysis and it fits. So would a star moving away from us with less light intensity(already shinning closer to red(kind of pink white) * Also mass density of star.as it radiates white light but its great gravity changes photons to be longer and longer lengths in their great journey to hit our eyes. * TreBert * PS Wave lengths of photons tell us a lot ,but to measure each photon wave accurately is ???? Obviously black holes drag the photon wave out to its maximum graviton wavelength, in so much as we see only black or rather the lack of any spectrum of light. There's also the black area or dark cloud as any black hole patch of our cosmic sky, that's also not giving way to photons. (notice the reddish color shift of stars within the surrounding edge of this dark substance, as though stellar photons had to drastically slow down before continuing on their way) http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys301...68_vlt_big.jpg ~ BG |
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On Feb 2, 10:58*pm, "Painius" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message... ... On Feb 2, 5:22 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: Painius I get your angle analysis and it fits. So would a star moving away from us with less light intensity(already shinning closer to red(kind of pink white) Also mass density of star.as it radiates white light but its great gravity changes photons to be longer and longer lengths in their great journey to hit our eyes. TreBert PS Wave lengths of photons tell us a lot ,but to measure each photon wave accurately is ???? Obviously black holes drag the photon wave out to its maximum graviton wavelength, in so much as we see only black or rather the lack of any spectrum of light. There's also the black area or dark cloud as any black hole patch of our cosmic sky, that's also not giving way to photons. (notice the reddish color shift of stars within the surrounding edge of this dark substance, as though stellar photons had to drastically slow down before continuing on their way) http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys301...h/barnard68_vl... *~ BG That's Barnard 68, Brad, a star-forming region about 4 or 500 light years away and 1/2 a light year across. Astronomers know it's fairly nearby, because there's not one single star between B68 and the Sun. *And it does give way to photons, just not visible light. *IR photons get through just peachy... *http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080323.html *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnard_68 So it's a good IR bandpass filter that's made of ? black diamond dust ? ~ BG |
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On Feb 3, 12:55*am, "Painius" wrote:
"Painius" wrote in message... ... "BradGuth" wrote in message... .... On Feb 2, 5:22 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: Painius I get your angle analysis and it fits. So would a star moving away from us with less light intensity(already shinning closer to red(kind of pink white) Also mass density of star.as it radiates white light but its great gravity changes photons to be longer and longer lengths in their great journey to hit our eyes. TreBert PS Wave lengths of photons tell us a lot ,but to measure each photon wave accurately is ???? Obviously black holes drag the photon wave out to its maximum graviton wavelength, in so much as we see only black or rather the lack of any spectrum of light. There's also the black area or dark cloud as any black hole patch of our cosmic sky, that's also not giving way to photons. (notice the reddish color shift of stars within the surrounding edge of this dark substance, as though stellar photons had to drastically slow down before continuing on their way) http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys301...h/barnard68_vl.... That's Barnard 68, Brad, a star-forming region about 4 or 500 light years away and 1/2 a light year across. Astronomers know it's fairly nearby, because there's not one single star between B68 and the Sun. *And it does give way to photons, just not visible light. *IR photons get through just peachy... http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080323.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnard_68 Here's a silly question... As noted, B68 is fairly close, 4 or 500 light years away. So if the cloud emitted light, it would take 4 or 500 years to reach us. Since no visible light can pierce the darkness of this huge molecular cloud, and no visible light photons are emitted from it, how long does it take for the "dark" to reach our eyes? IOW, does the darkness travel at the same speed as the light? or does it reach us instantly? To better understand the question, ask yourself what happens if the cloud were to begin to noticeably compress. Would we see the compression in "real" time because the darkness reaches our eyes instantly? And how about the stars behind the cloud? *Their light is blocked by the cloud, so if the cloud contracts and gets smaller, won't it take 4 to 500 years before the previously blocked starlight can reach our eyes? The answer to that last one would be "yes". *And this of course means that if the cloud is getting smaller, then we would not see any newly unblocked stars for the time it takes the light of the stars to get to our eyes. *So that cloud could already be smaller than it actually appears. So it's likely a shrinking dark mass as well as providing a good IR bandpass filter, that's made of ???? (black diamond dust) ~ BG |
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On Feb 3, 12:55*am, "Painius" wrote:
"Painius" wrote in message... ... "BradGuth" wrote in message... .... On Feb 2, 5:22 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: Painius I get your angle analysis and it fits. So would a star moving away from us with less light intensity(already shinning closer to red(kind of pink white) Also mass density of star.as it radiates white light but its great gravity changes photons to be longer and longer lengths in their great journey to hit our eyes. TreBert PS Wave lengths of photons tell us a lot ,but to measure each photon wave accurately is ???? Obviously black holes drag the photon wave out to its maximum graviton wavelength, in so much as we see only black or rather the lack of any spectrum of light. There's also the black area or dark cloud as any black hole patch of our cosmic sky, that's also not giving way to photons. (notice the reddish color shift of stars within the surrounding edge of this dark substance, as though stellar photons had to drastically slow down before continuing on their way) http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys301...h/barnard68_vl.... That's Barnard 68, Brad, a star-forming region about 4 or 500 light years away and 1/2 a light year across. Astronomers know it's fairly nearby, because there's not one single star between B68 and the Sun. *And it does give way to photons, just not visible light. *IR photons get through just peachy... http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080323.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnard_68 Here's a silly question... As noted, B68 is fairly close, 4 or 500 light years away. So if the cloud emitted light, it would take 4 or 500 years to reach us. Since no visible light can pierce the darkness of this huge molecular cloud, and no visible light photons are emitted from it, how long does it take for the "dark" to reach our eyes? IOW, does the darkness travel at the same speed as the light? or does it reach us instantly? Are we talking photoffs here? Double-A |
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AA wrote, re. "speed of darkness":
Are we talking photoffs here? No, darkons. :-) |
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On Feb 8, 7:02*am, (oldcoot) wrote:
AA wrote, re. "speed of darkness": Are we talking photoffs here? No, darkons. :-) The speed of dark gravity could be c, 2c or for all we know c2. Electrons seem to coexist as a BH point-source of combined dark matter plus dark energy. ~ BG |
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On Feb 8, 9:37*am, BradGuth wrote:
On Feb 8, 7:02*am, (oldcoot) wrote: AA wrote, re. "speed of darkness": Are we talking photoffs here? No, darkons. :-) The speed of dark gravity could be c, 2c or for all we know c2. Electrons seem to coexist as a BH point-source of combined dark matter plus dark energy. *~ BG Citation? Double-A |
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On Feb 8, 3:29*pm, Double-A wrote:
On Feb 8, 9:37*am, BradGuth wrote: On Feb 8, 7:02*am, (oldcoot) wrote: AA wrote, re. "speed of darkness": Are we talking photoffs here? No, darkons. :-) The speed of dark gravity could be c, 2c or for all we know c2. Electrons seem to coexist as a BH point-source of combined dark matter plus dark energy. *~ BG Citation? The best available physics and science is what can't seem to objectively measure the physical radius of an individual electron. Most of physics and science has given up on getting any electron volumetric size, although not of its mass or worth of energy. In other words, a trillion electrons compacted and/or merged together would weigh 9.1094e-16 g, and yet as a whole they'd still be dark and nearly if not still representing a singularity. Why can't an electron be a BH singularity? ~ BG |
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On Feb 8, 4:08*pm, BradGuth wrote:
On Feb 8, 3:29*pm, Double-A wrote: On Feb 8, 9:37*am, BradGuth wrote: On Feb 8, 7:02*am, (oldcoot) wrote: AA wrote, re. "speed of darkness": Are we talking photoffs here? No, darkons. :-) The speed of dark gravity could be c, 2c or for all we know c2. Electrons seem to coexist as a BH point-source of combined dark matter plus dark energy. *~ BG Citation? The best available physics and science is what can't seem to objectively measure the physical radius of an individual electron. Most of physics and science has given up on getting any electron volumetric size, although not of its mass or worth of energy. In other words, a trillion electrons compacted and/or merged together would weigh 9.1094e-16 g, and yet as a whole they'd still be dark and nearly if not still representing a singularity. Why can't an electron be a BH singularity? *~ BG Wheeler thought it was. Double-A |
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