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Author Topic:   Is the speed of light constant between galaxies?
sunshaker
Member (Idle past 984 days)
Posts: 49
From: England
Joined: 10-25-2012


Message 61 of 66 (680406)
11-19-2012 1:36 PM
Reply to: Message 56 by Taq
11-19-2012 11:54 AM


Like i said you have not the ability to think for yourself,
As the universe expands lower d space is rushing in,
dark matter also expands as the space within is "unfolded" and ripped, produceing these massive amounts of protons, this is picked up and deposited by the lower d space, which we see as "gamma ray bursts", from what i understand quite luminous.
As for ions, i was trying to explain protons without electrons, as we understand.
Perhaps as near as we'll get to explainning dark matter in terms of our space/time would be the centre of a neutron star, "quark gluon plasma".
Edited by sunshaker, : No reason given.
Edited by sunshaker, : No reason given.
Edited by sunshaker, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 56 by Taq, posted 11-19-2012 11:54 AM Taq has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 62 by Taq, posted 11-19-2012 1:45 PM sunshaker has not replied

  
Taq
Member
Posts: 10044
Joined: 03-06-2009
Member Rating: 5.3


Message 62 of 66 (680408)
11-19-2012 1:45 PM
Reply to: Message 61 by sunshaker
11-19-2012 1:36 PM


Like i said you have not the ability to think for yourself,
Yes, I do. I actually look at the evidence instead of making stuff up like you do.
As the universe expands lower d space is rushing in,
Based on what evidence?
dark matter also expands as the space within is "unfolded" and ripped, produceing these massive amounts of photons, this is picked up and deposited by the lower d space, which we see as "gamma ray bursts", from what i understand quite luminous.
Based on what evidence?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 61 by sunshaker, posted 11-19-2012 1:36 PM sunshaker has not replied

  
NoNukes
Inactive Member


Message 63 of 66 (680418)
11-19-2012 2:14 PM
Reply to: Message 54 by sunshaker
11-19-2012 10:18 AM


If dark matter is anti matter, matter and light would be pushed away,
What would generate the "pushing away" you describe here? For particles with charge, the corresponding anti-particle has opposite charge which would produce attraction. Anti-matter is not repelled gravitationally by normal matter. Is this yet another thing that you have simply made up?
are in effect there own anti particle, which would mean when a photon comes into contact with dark matter it would be both a photon and an anti photon, the photon would be pushed away in the opposite direction and the anti-photon which would then pass through dark matter
The above, poster sunshaker, is complete malarkey. Why would the two identical particles (photon and anti-photon) behave differently? You started off okay when you acknowledged that an anti-photon was just a photon, but then you seemed to go off into left field. Why would anti-matter repel (or attract) a photon?

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sunshaker
Member (Idle past 984 days)
Posts: 49
From: England
Joined: 10-25-2012


Message 64 of 66 (681077)
11-22-2012 11:01 AM


When light comes into contact with dark matter, it is both a wave and a particle,
The wave is bent around the dark matter (quark gluon plasma in folded space/time),
Which we see as gravitational lensing, but the particle will go through the dark matter, but will also leave our frame of reference,
follow the particle through dark matter and its speed would not change, staying at c, but only relative to the the space it travels through, it would eventually pass through dark matter long after the wave as gone around.
Once it leaves dark matter it once again becomes a wave and a particle and continues on it way, Until it reaches the next clumb of dark matter.
The particle is never scattered, due the fact D/M Is folded space/time, that from our space/time perspective keeps the photon particle in a focused tight narrow beam.
where as the wave is is distorted by gravitational lensing.
And if 80-90% of universe is dark/matter there is alot of bending going on, so we should only see distorted images, which we do not, that is because of the particle that travels through D/M (quark gluon PLASMA) is not distorted or scattered.

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sunshaker
Member (Idle past 984 days)
Posts: 49
From: England
Joined: 10-25-2012


Message 65 of 66 (681080)
11-22-2012 11:27 AM


The neutral B mesons, B0 and B0
s, spontaneously transform into their own antiparticles and back.
uncharged mesons may decay to photons.
Physics - Particle Decays Point to an Arrow of Time

  
Taq
Member
Posts: 10044
Joined: 03-06-2009
Member Rating: 5.3


Message 66 of 66 (681580)
11-26-2012 2:59 PM
Reply to: Message 64 by sunshaker
11-22-2012 11:01 AM


The wave is bent around the dark matter (quark gluon plasma in folded space/time),
Dark matter can not be a plasma because plasmas absorb and emit light. Dark matter does not.
but the particle will go through the dark matter, but will also leave our frame of reference,
follow the particle through dark matter and its speed would not change, staying at c, but only relative to the the space it travels through, it would eventually pass through dark matter long after the wave as gone around.
You can not separate the wave function from a particle. The wave function describes the location of a particle. This is Quantum Mechanics 101.
And if 80-90% of universe is dark/matter there is alot of bending going on, so we should only see distorted images,
Where is your math?

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