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On 1 feb, 20:43, Cecil Moore wrote:
An airplane (particle) traveling at the speed of sound causes shock waves in the air which, if passed through double slits, would no doubt cause interference. How about: A photon (particle) traveling at the speed of light causes shock waves in the aether which, when passed through double slits, causes interference? Impossible for empty space - but we now know that space is not empty. :-) Quoting "Alpha and Omega", by Seife, "Empty space is an incredibly complex substance, and scientists are just beginning to understand its properties." -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com Hello Cecil, I don't believe you can compare the two phenomena. The photons are created because of an accelerating charge (so the photon is the wave itself, not the source that created the wave). However, as far as I know, there is an (almost) equivalent for the airplane/air shockwave. When you shoot a charged particle (v close to c0) into a material with rel. eps 1 the particle will not abruptly slow down when entering the material with high rel.eps. So it can have a speed that is above the propagation speed of EM waves in that material. In that case an EM shock wave occurs. Look for Cherenkov shockwave. Best regards, Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl |
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