THE MALTA COSMOLOGY TEMPLATE



Chapter 6 - Photons






PARTS



Chapter
Home

Part 1
Cosmic Photon Creation


Part 2
Photon Mechanics


Part 3
Cosmic Background Radiation


Part 4
Selfproof
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Part 2 - Photon Mechanics

ARGUMENT 0606

BROUGHT FORWARD:

  • CURRENT COSMOLOGY MODEL: Redshift happens when light seen coming from an object that is moving away is proportionately increased in wavelength, or shifted to the red end of the spectrum. (Wikipedia 02 Mar 2012)
  • CURRENT COSMOLOGY MODEL: Blueshift is any decrease in wavelength (increase in frequency). In visible light, this shifts the colour from the red end of the spectrum to the blue end. The term also applies when photons outside the visible spectrum are shifted toward shorter wavelengths, as well as relative motion toward the observer. (Wikipedia 31 Mar 2012)
  • CURRENT COSMOLOGY MODEL:  The speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted c, is a universal physical constant important in many areas of physics. Its value is exactly 299,792,458 metres per second, as the length of the metre is defined from this constant and the international standard for time. (Wikipedia 31 Dec 2014)
  • ARGUMENT 0330 - When a blackhole absorbs a teel, it gains proportionately more energy than mass. When a blackhole ejects a teel, it loses proportionately more energy than mass.
  • ARGUMENT 0333: A blackhole converging on another object accelerates due to their mutual gravitypull. A blackhole diverging from another object decelerates due to their mutual gravitypull.
REASONING:
  • A photon is a stable blackhole that travels at lightspeed.
  • When a photon converges on another object it potentially accelerates.
  • When a photon potentially accelerates it becomes potentially understable.
  • The potential understability triggers the following multiprocess:

    • PROCESS 1:

      • An understable photon ejects teels and thus mass and energy. 
      • It ejects proportionately more energy than mass.
      • The decreased mass equates to a decreased internal gravitypull.
      • The decreased internal gravitypull expands the photon.
      • The expansion transmutes kineticenergy to potentialenergy.
      • The transmutation of kineticenergy to potentialenergy equates to a decrease in spinspeed.  
      • The decrease in spinspeed overstabilises the photon.
      • An overstable photon absorbs teels and thus mass and energy.  
      • It absorbs proportionately more energy than mass. 

    • PROCESS 2:

      • An understable photon ejects teels and thus mass and energy. 
      • It ejects proportionately more energy than mass.
      • The decreased energy equates to an increased internal gravitypull.
      • The increased internal gravitypull contracts the photon.
      • The contraction transmutes potentialenergy to kineticenergy.
      • The transmutation of potentialenergy to kineticenergy equates to an increase in spinspeed.
      • The increase in spin and speed further understabilises the photon.
      • An understable photon ejects teels and thus mass and energy.
      • It ejects proportionately more energy than mass.
  • A potentially understable photon is subject to both a blue gravityshift and a red gravityshift simultaneously.
  • The two gravityshifts do not offer the same measures of mass and energy and do not cancel each other out. 
  • More mass and energy is absorbed (blue gravityshift) than is ejected (red gravityshift), resulting in an overall increase in mass and energy and thus an overall blue gravityshift.  
  • In blue gravityshifting proportionately more energy than mass is absorbed and in red gravityshifting more energy than mass is ejected - thus an overall blue gravityshift results in a proportionate increase in the ratio of energy over mass. 
  • The proportionate increase in the ratio of energy over mass during is enough to keep the photon moving at lightspeed. 
CONCLUSION:
  • A photon converging on another object is blue gravityshifted.

GLOSSARY:  
  • gravityshift:   Any change in the mass and energy measures of a blackhole due to its mutual gravitypull with another object.
  • multiprocess:   Two or more distinct processes, each producing their own results (which may be contrary or complementary) which are thereafter apparent as a single combined result.





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Copyright 2013 Peter (Ed) Winchester