Light as a particle in a wave?
- From: "Scismgenie" <Scismgenie@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 13 Aug 2005 08:33:34 -0700
IF Light can display properies as both a particle and a waveform, would
that negate the threshold of Light as the ultimate speed limit of
mass?
Or does it imply that anything going AT the speed of light loses all
Mass characteristics?
Is the amout of energy EXPENDED to accelerate mass to the speed of
light considered to be infinite? (exponentially taking MORE energy to
push a smaller mass faster?) Is there an Energy barrier of diminishing
returns?
In other-words the Speed of Light is probably FASTER than the practical
ability to gain acceleration? (except on a molecular scale?)
If Light is a particle, and that particle is scillating (frequency)
and the frequency of oscillation is longer than a reference point, do
different frequency oscillations cause the particles to move at
different speeds in relation to the crossover point of teh oscillation?
If so does that indicate that Light particles of a longer wavelength
are traveling faster tham shorteones to cover the same distance of
linear travel in the same time reference, (actually covering more
distance because of wider oscillations?) Or it is represented that the
particle travels at a constant speed linearly, but oscilates
perpendicular to the direction of travel a greater vaariance from the
crossover reference? (wobble?)
If a light particle oscillates, what does it oscillate AROUND, would it
be like an Orbit with a complementary mass to oscillate around?
Excuse my simplistic non-educated questions.
.
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