Chapter 2 - Wave Theory and
Photons
(Continued —
Page 21)
A known paradox in research is that when a stream of light
meets other streams coming from different points (picture
below), they all have the same velocity and properties. The
following pictures illustrate how light streams meet. We see
that the streams of magnetic rings rotating in vertical positions
flow in the same direction as its neighbouring streams. The
magnetic rings are pulled toward the others. The energetic
rings, located in a transversal position between the magnetic
rings and their streams, flow in one direction in their transversal
paths. These streams flow in an opposite direction, however,
to neighbouring energetic streams. Although the energetic
flow is in different directions, the energetic rings have
wrapping properties that keep each stream together. From the
following pictures, we see why streams that meet do not change
light velocity.
Photons are primary, unstable wave particles containing two
easily separable loops. Helium atoms, with four loops (two
photons), two energetic (protons) and two magnetic (neutrons),
are the first stable atoms-particles (picture below).
In the atom, we have a strong, double connection: the energetic
loops of each wave (photon) intermingle with the magnetic
loops of the other. In a light stream, only the magnetic loops
connect with each other, so the connection is weaker and the
particles of light scatter easily.
Only energetic matter can create these phenomenal creations
and unbelievable formations. In this short introduction to
wave theory, I cannot fully discuss this issue. Although it
seems very simple, it is really very complex. I leave it to
young physicists to continue with what I believe to be an
endless subject.
-end-
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Dr. Chaim Tejman, Copyright©
2001. All rights reserved.
[Index]
[Introduction]
[Summary] [Wave
Formation] [Photons] [Gravitation]
[Time]
[Atoms] [Life]
[Cancer] [Fundamental
Force] [Gender/Why Sex?]
[Sexual Reproduction]
[Schrodinger & Heisenberg]
[Creation] [Supernova]
[Dark
Matter & Astronomy] [Speed
of Light] [Cloud Formations]
[Natural Disasters] [Global
Warming] [Thermodynamics]
[Backward Time] [Quantum
Mechanics] [Compton Effect]
[Equations] [Predictions]
[Academic Correspondences] [Contact]
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