Compatibility among alternative cosmologies?

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16 years 7 months ago #19963 by Jim
Replied by Jim on topic Reply from
Sloat, How can you half the energy of the photon? And if you do are you still in the same universe? I guess you have several universes in this story and isn't it scify? The energy can(and must) transform to mass if the right environment exists somewhere out there so you don't need to ponder how energy is lost over time. The thing to do is determine how energy is transformed to mass and find where in the universe the right conditions do in fact exist. The stuff recycles in the universe so it can't communicate with the past or future,

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16 years 7 months ago #20694 by Stoat
Replied by Stoat on topic Reply from Robert Turner
Hi Jim, sorry if that wasnt very clear, halving the energy of a photon was from GMBs post. Ive no problems with it but I would argue that any particle can hide half of it mass in a negative refractive index core.

This is a bec universe, it doesnt involve any contradictions, though it does do some unusual tricks. Suppose we were to introduce light into a bec crystal of one cubic centimetre, the photons on the outside would say, "that's a cubic centimetre." those on the inside, slowed right down, would say, "no, this thing is gigantic! "

Lets take a look at the electron, its energy is 8.18711116801E-14 joules. Now do the sums with the speed of gravity in place of the speed of light. The speed of gravity being, my estimate, 1.16464217444E 25 We get 1.2355897798E 20 Joules. Is there any relationship between the two energies? 1.2355897798E 20 is exactly equal to the light speed frequency of the electron. So, rather than dividing by h we divide by the number one. Which is to say that the core of an electron has an angular momentum of one and an angular velocity of the speed of gravity. In other words it cannot be crushed by vacuum energy as it contains vacuum energy.

Ill leave the comments about Olbers paradox for later, his question was," why is the sky black?"

(Edited) to clear up my comment about the mass of a photon, in the first paragraph. I get for the rest mass of a Compton photon 6.03595039111E-64 killgrams. Divide that through by the electon mass and we get h.

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