- #1
omin
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1. The speed of light is constant.
2. Light may reflect off objects.
3. The speed of light is not determined by it's source.
If the speed of light is constant and this speed is unaffected by it's source, then the expression, the shape light is, is it's natural shape and it's speed simultaneously. Light's inertia is it's shape, it's physical expression and vice versa. Light speeds itself, objects don't speed the light.
But, light can be reflected. For something to change directions, acceleration must occur. For acceleration to occur, a change in velocity must occur. For velocity to occur, a change of speed and/or direction must occur. Can it be proven that only direction occurs when light is reflected? What rules out a change of speed assuredly during reflection? Is a mirror that reflects light a new source compared to the source where light last emerged?
If the source does not determine the speed of light, then why does the speed of light always acclerate away from a source at the speed of light consistently? How does the light know that the source is there to speed away from at the constant speed?
If two mirrors are traveling at different speeds compared to each other and light is reflected from one to another, shouldn't now light change speed dependent upon source or what happens?
Since light is constant, it must have an exact quantity between the mirrors at any given state, and this quantity of light definitely changes with the distance the mirrors are from each other. When the mirror's distance is compressed, where does this extra light go? Does it begin to reflect faster?
-Still trying to understand relativity.
2. Light may reflect off objects.
3. The speed of light is not determined by it's source.
If the speed of light is constant and this speed is unaffected by it's source, then the expression, the shape light is, is it's natural shape and it's speed simultaneously. Light's inertia is it's shape, it's physical expression and vice versa. Light speeds itself, objects don't speed the light.
But, light can be reflected. For something to change directions, acceleration must occur. For acceleration to occur, a change in velocity must occur. For velocity to occur, a change of speed and/or direction must occur. Can it be proven that only direction occurs when light is reflected? What rules out a change of speed assuredly during reflection? Is a mirror that reflects light a new source compared to the source where light last emerged?
If the source does not determine the speed of light, then why does the speed of light always acclerate away from a source at the speed of light consistently? How does the light know that the source is there to speed away from at the constant speed?
If two mirrors are traveling at different speeds compared to each other and light is reflected from one to another, shouldn't now light change speed dependent upon source or what happens?
Since light is constant, it must have an exact quantity between the mirrors at any given state, and this quantity of light definitely changes with the distance the mirrors are from each other. When the mirror's distance is compressed, where does this extra light go? Does it begin to reflect faster?
-Still trying to understand relativity.