User talk:Weinsyein/sandbox

… Professor Dr. Albert Einstein is famous for many insights into physics, despite the fact that Dr. Einstein, himself, had said that he had made many mistakes. Therefore, I want you to know that I agree with Dr. Einstein. You may not be familiar with this folly by the master. Dr. Einstein considered three pillars of physics: (1) Time is independent of motion, (2) Length is independent of speed, and (3) The speed of light in a vacuum is c.

I am not going to explain those pillars, but the three are not mutually compatible. In response to strong experimental results, Dr. Einstein rejected the first two pillars and kept the third. In doing so, Dr. Einstein created Special Relativity. In Special Relativity, light travels at speed c relative to whatever measures it. If we take another approach, we get a different answer. Let us take the first two pillars as true, and the third as false. Under those conditions, we may get a Newtonian physics with a twist. The twist is that light travels at speed c in its local gravitational field. Perhaps, that is what Professor Einstein missed? What about all those study results that show that light travels at c relative to anything? Einstein considers two areas of study results: there and here. There – the outer space conclusion – may not take into account, for instance, stellar gases, which may affect the speed of light. After all, light in (say) glass travels at a slower constant speed, presumably due to the glass – and glass or gas, what’s the difference? Here – the inner space conclusion (that is, conclusions from studies done at the surface of the Earth) – may be explained by something that was once called the “aether.” As Professor Beckmann has said, “Sound in air is like light in gravity.”  Gravity is the aether. Thus, just as sound in air is a “constant” in all directions (under controlled conditions of no wind, etc.), light in gravity is “constant” in all directions (controlled conditions). Looking back to outer space (the “there” studies) perhaps the separate gravities of the dual stars merge, resulting in a constant speed of light for both stars as their lights approach Earth.

Instead of the Special-Relativity solution, consider this solution: light travels at c to its local gravitational field.

If you need another reason, then look to Stellar Aberration, which I will not explain here.

Ref: http://brokenelevator.weebly.com/ --Weinsyein (discuss • contribs) 19:52, 28 July 2014 (UTC)--Weinsyein (discuss • contribs) 19:52, 28 July 2014 (UTC)