Re: Theorems.
Originally posted by mischief
I realized recently some things physicists love to ignore:
Light has a minute mass, therefore it must be subject to entropy over long distances.
Light is bent and even "lensed" by large gravitational fields......therefore it only stands to reason that no measurements made from DEEP within the gravity well of both our host star and our home planet can be called accurate.
It's quite likely that Light travels considerably faster in open space cuz it has no gravitational "lag". This suggests a much smaller local map than ever previously guessed.
I'm no physicist, but your theory seems to be not quite accurate.
First, many physicists think that light is not only bend by gravitational fields, but in the case of very large fields (like black holes) it is bent into the field and cannot escape. However, it doesn't mean the light is necessarily slowing down. It could be speeding up. We don't know because the light doesn't escape so that we can measure it.
How could it speed up? The sling effect is one way in which matter can speed up when effected by a gravitational field. This is when matter approaches a gravitational field and is pulled towards the field, but not enough so that the matter stays within the field, instead it is flung off of the field with greater speed.
Also, if light was travelling in such a way as to be travelling directly towards the field, wouldn't the strength of the field speed it up rather than slowing it down. Travelling with the field should add velocity (or more likely not change velocity), not subtract.
I just don't think its likely that the scientific community has so seriously misjudged the distance/speed/size of celestial bodies.
I think there are a lot of things that you might not have considered when coming up with this theory. (A bit off-topic, but...) Just as I think that there are many complexities to combatting AIDS/HIV that you may have overlooked. I'm no physicist (or biologist), but there are a lot of scientists (in fact most) who would strongly disagree with your theory on both subjects.
And don't get me wrong, I love hearing new theories about these kind of things. New ideas are important and drive innovation and human progress. These theories completely disagree with current thinking on these subjects and so I don't agree with them. But maybe you'll prove us all wrong.
I think it would be cool if you did.
🙂
Matthew