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Old May 27th 10, 05:53 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
[email protected] jimp@specsol.spam.sux.com is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jun 2006
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Default Computer model experiment

Cecil Moore wrote:
On May 27, 10:59Â*am, Bill Baka wrote:
I am wondering how a wave, light, can be affected by a black hole as has
been seen by the Hubble space telescope. This goes deeply into the
nature of light it self, like how is a wave with no real mass affected?


Photons have mass because of their velocity (speed of light). m = E/
c^2 Photons have no rest mass but they are never at rest. An
experiment long ago proved Einstein to be correct when he claimed that
light was affected by gravity. A black hole is no exception.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_lens


And if you read that article you will find it says that space itself is
warped which means the path is changed and not that the photons are
put on a different path because they have mass.


--
Jim Pennino

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