Light in OTHERwise vacu.



 Science > Physics > Light in OTHERwise vacu.

LINK TO THIS PAGE  


rating :  0   |  0


  Page 1 of 1
Topic: Science > Physics
User: "brian a m stuckless"
Date: 15 Feb 2006 03:43:21 PM
Object: Light in OTHERwise vacu.
$$ ^.
$$ Light in OTHERwise vacu.
$$ .."by 'c' you mean the speed of light [OTHERwise] in vacuum."
$$ .."by 'c' you mean the speed of light in [OTHERwise a] vacuum."
$$ ANY SPACE where light is (with LiGHT in it) is "a curved ..space".
$$ Note, ANY "flat space[TiME]" DOEs NOT have ANY LiGHT in it, AT ALL.
$$ ANY space or SPACE-time with "an object havin c" in it, isN'T FLAT.
$$ GR c is *PEGGED* at c ..there is NO AMBiENT in GR or Newton Tivity.
$$ ANY space/SPACE-time with a solar system in it isN'T FLAT or EMPTY.
[Brackets mine, ```Brian].
Xing Taipan wrote: > > Don Carluci wrote: > > Tom Roberts wrote: -=-

I don't know who "they" is that cannot answer. In the context
of GR this is easy to answer as long as I assume by 'c' you
mean the speed of light in vacuum.

insert ..see TOP of page, Tom [between his error-bars] Roberts, Ph.T.

my bad > >
i explicitely didnt said speed of light, but somthin else,
take an object havin c, a muon for instance > >

ANY space or SPACE-time with "an object havin c" in it isN'T FLAT.

now do tha same trick, explain what its
c close to 300000 km/s mean

is it in a flat space, a curved / contracted
space, is it measured, is it considered,
assumed, asserted? > >

insert ..see TOP of page.

what is it?

GR c is *PEGGED* at c ..there is NO AMBiENT in GR or Newton Tivity.

thay cant answer this unbulivable simple questn >
laaa laaa la laaa la ... > > >


[I don't know what you might mean by "contracted space",
so I ignore that.]

The speed of light in [OTHERwise] vacuum is indeed close to
300000 km/s in all laboratories on earth; specifically the
laboratory value is 299,792.458 km/s. Note that for all such
measurements the curvature due to gravitation can be neglected
[..in PRACTiCE, but NOT in THEORY], and this is the
[..OTHERwise] flat-spaceTIME value.

For all spaceTIME curvatures encountered in the solar system,

$$ Theoretically speaking..
ANY space/SPACE-time with a solar system in it isN'T FLAT or EMPTY.
```Brian.

-=- the speed of light is "close" to that value. Indeed, -=-
Tom [between his error-bars] Roberts


Re: unbulivable simple question thay cant answer for sure
Re: Light in OTHERwise vacu.
.


  Page 1 of 1


Related Articles
EXHiBiT VELOCiTY & SPEED of light ..for DiFFERENT particle COUNTs.!! EXHiBiT ERROR-BARs for ALL "in-vacu" PARTiCLE-COUNTs, Cracked-pot.!! Many DiFFERENT particle-COUNTs *NOT* different SiTUATiONs, Dimwit.!!
Error-bars "in vacu".
Zero particle-count-error-bars.!! (i.e. in-vacu) by Uncle Tom.
Empty SPACE objects to VARiOUS vacu ..NO STRiNGs attached.
Empty space objects to various vacu.
Inducing fission in otherwise stable atoms.
Where it isN'T isN'T OTHERwise empty.
Re: ***** Eastman Destroys Another Pentagon Disinfo Campaign was Re: Eastman's guide to exposing the 9-11 mass-murder frameup to justify world-domination to an otherwise isolationist American public
Re: Otherwise the candle in Nell's sauce might seek some clever exits.
OTHERwise EMPTY fields.
Re: How can one believe the Earth to be 13,000 years old when the data says otherwise?
Gooks, otherwise the butcher in Joie's pen might answer some blunt desks, American Tired Loon.
Re: Light and its time
Spring-Light Theory..
The speed of light is OBJECTIVELY fast
 

NEWER

pg.1612     pg.1232     pg.940     pg.716     pg.544     pg.412     pg.311     pg.234     pg.175     pg.130     pg.96     pg.70     pg.50     pg.35     pg.24     pg.16     pg.10     pg.6     pg.3     pg.1

OLDER