On Sep 16, 10:23*pm, John Smith wrote:
wrote:
...
I should have used black holes as my example. One only needs to accept
that black holes exist in order to believe that gravity affects the
property of mass inerent in light ;-)
Really?
Then your mind is so limited it doesn't realize that a black hole would
warp the very fabric of space/time itself, and therefore the wave
propagating though it, and therefore the wave would have to choice but
purse a course towards it? ... yanno', I suspected just that thing!
Regards,
JS
Right. Black holes have high gravity. Gravity warps space. Light can
travel only through the boundaries of space, therefore light has mass.
No need to say space-time, "space" is sufficient. The discussion may
be quantum related but it is not relativistic.