Recent content by Slait
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Graduate Experiment on mass of a photon
Everyone that sails too far west disappears, conclusion, the Earth is definitely flat. Cant argue with that logic- Slait
- Post #29
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Experiment on mass of a photon
The torsion experiments are good. But there are two variables that i can't help but wonder. 1: Its being pushed by they residual air. Its very hard to make a perfect vacuum or even prove that its a perfect vacuum. Crookes radiometer has to be in a partial vacuum to work 2: The torsion pendulum...- Slait
- Post #27
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Experiment on mass of a photon
Only 1 example. The experiment was based on Einsteins theory- Slait
- Post #23
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Experiment on mass of a photon
Now we are getting somewhere. That experiment is close but the laser isn't moving the matter, its just vibrating the field in a resonant frequency to reduce the vibration of the atoms.- Slait
- Post #21
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Experiment on mass of a photon
Again, that equation is based on the energy. I want to see light pushing an object. I don't believe that it can. Science isn't a religion, something isn't true just because a book says so. The only thing that interferes with my learning is my education. -Albert Einstein- Slait
- Post #18
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Experiment on mass of a photon
Ok, sorry, momentum without mass...i think something is wrong there. Anyway you mentioned hundreds of examples, do you have a link to any of those examples? because that's what I'm looking for- Slait
- Post #16
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Experiment on mass of a photon
the only one that sounds like it might be close to what I am talking about is the most recent experiment but i don't know how to access the documents for the details. The reason I'm searching is I'm skeptical about light having mass. I want to see an experiment of light actually pushing a...- Slait
- Post #12
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Experiment on mass of a photon
Ive been trying to find if anyone has done a simple experiment to test relativistic mass of a photon. I was hoping if anyone has found documentation or results of the following experiment: In a vacuum fire a stream of photons at different frequencies at a pressure plate and measure the...- Slait
- Thread
- Experiment Mass Photon
- Replies: 33
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Can We See Our Own Solar System Through Gravity's Mirror?
What would the math be?- Slait
- Post #4
- Forum: Astronomy and Astrophysics
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Graduate Can We See Our Own Solar System Through Gravity's Mirror?
So gravity bends space, and black holes bend space in a loop. Is it possible for there to be a gravitational field somewhere in space, just strong enough, that it bends the light emitted by our system back to us so we could see ourselves?- Slait
- Thread
- Effects Gravity Mirror
- Replies: 4
- Forum: Astronomy and Astrophysics
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Undergrad The opposite of the limit of light
That just blows my mind. Im having trouble putting this and the energy of movement together now. If we arent moving, no matter how much thrust we put into trying to move us, where does that energy go?- Slait
- Post #7
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Undergrad The opposite of the limit of light
So if we are always the slowest moving object from our own frame, wouldn't that mean the speed limit of light only applys to other objects? because no matter how fast we are moving we are always at 0 in comparison to the speed of light.- Slait
- Post #5
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Undergrad The opposite of the limit of light
So our clock will always be the fastest? everything else that we observe will be slower? Wouldnt that make us stationary?- Slait
- Post #3
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Undergrad The opposite of the limit of light
I was thinking about the theory of relativity and how the faster we go the slower time goes and the smaller we become which evens out the equation for speed. Distance / Time = speed Correct me if I am wrong but what i see from this is, as we go faster time slows down and distance decreases...- Slait
- Thread
- Light Limit
- Replies: 9
- Forum: Special and General Relativity