- September 4th, 2012, 3:34 am
#100074
A Poster He Or I said: “The color of light is not a factor of its speed, but its frequency (i.e. how energetic it is). Even if you accelerate to a great speed relative to light, the light will not slow down relative to you (the mathematics of Special Relativity can explain why the train analogy--and common sense--fails us here).”
This is why I question Einstein. Because if light has a speed and if you have a speed when you travel, and if you travel faster, then, light may appear to be slower as you move faster.
Why?
Because light is just like a moving train. If you have a race with the train, if you move faster, than, as you accelerate, then, the train may appear to be slower.
Because your motion is relative to the motion of the train.
So as light, where if you have a race with the speed of light, as you accelerate, then, light needs to be slower relative to your motion, otherwise it will not conform to what you see.
Secondly, you said that the colour of light is frequency.
Look, frequency, speed, colour, energy, force, time and so on are all influenced by one another. It will be strange if the frequency changes and the colour of light does not change.
Scott said: “Regardless, I think it is incorrect to say the sky is not blue or to say all things do not have colors. You compare light to a ball bouncing back Indeed, but the way the ball bounces back would depend on the qualities of the wall or other surface against which it is bounced such as flatness, stickyness and hardness. One may measure the stickyness or flatness of a wall by bouncing a ball against it, but it is incorrect to say the wall does not have the quality of being sticky or flat. I think the same goes for color. When we say the wall is blue, we mean to describe a quality of the wall which determines how it interacts with light in normal circumstances (e.g. not when we are traveling at near lightspeed) which is a quality of the wall or sky not just a quality of the ball/light.”
I will say: “What you see is light. So light is the important part in determining what you see, not the wall, even though what you see is the wall. Because without light, you cannot see the wall."
Now, you are saying that the wall is determining how fast will light be reflected back to your eyes when you see it. I do not reject what you are saying, and it is because different things are different, and so once light hits different objects, the lights reflected back from various objects all have different speeds and so you see different colours.
But what I am saying is this: If you start to accelerate your speed as you travel, then, originally, the light reflected from the sky is blue will change to other colour as it approaches to your eyes, because your motion is relative to the motion of light reflected back from the sky.
But this may need to be a big change in your speed, where if you move very fast near the speed of light that you can feel the difference. If it is minor or little changes such as an ant walking, maybe little difference.
But if you are stationary, if you do not move, then the sky you see maybe is blue.
But when you move, as you travel, your speed relative to the speed of light is different, and because your speed is increasing, then, the speed of light that you see may be slower or faster, depending on your location.
If the speed of light changes, then, of course, the blue sky will change its colour.
So I am not saying that the sky is not blue.
The sky maybe is blue when you do not move.
But when you accelerate to a high speed, where your motion because you are moving, your motion relative to the motion of light is different, and because of this, the speed of light you see is not the same speed as another person who is not moving, and because of this, the blue sky changes its colour when it reaches your eyes.
So what I am saying is the sky is blue in a condition that a person is stationary, but if a person moves near the speed of light, then, because it is different situation, and so light changes its colour.
Otherwise it will not fit into what you see if two people at different situations see the same colour of light, just like two people in two different situations, where one moving and the other person stationary will experience different forces as the same object with same acceleration hits both of them.
If two different situations see the same colour of light, this is strange, isn’t it?
Because they are not same situation.
So when I was in school, teacher said: “Maybe there is exception.”