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9.2 - Wave Velocity Propagation Questions

"In 1945, John Wheeler and his graduate student Richard Feynman, then at Princeton University, proposed a novel way of looking at light that gives the backward-in-time solutions of Maxwell's equations equal status with the forward-in-time solutions. John Wheeler, author of a seven-pound paperback book on gravity, is presently director of a fundamental physics research center in Austin, Texas. Richard Feynman, who received the Nobel prize for developing an improved quantum theory of electromagnetic radiation, is remembered in some circles as "the Groucho Marx of physics" for his humorous and irreverent behavior. The Wheeler-Feynman model, called the "absorber theory of radiation," makes electromagnetism a two-way street as far as the time dimension is concerned. They base their time-symmetric theory on the assumption that every light wave emitted by an atom must be absorbed by another atom and that these two events, light emission plus light absorption, should be considered as a single inseparable process. [See Connecting Link, Sympathy]

According to the Wheeler-Feynman theory . . . radiation occurs in two steps. First atom A emits a half-sized (retarded) wave that travels forward in time at a speed of 186,000 mps to the absorber atom B. Atom B recoils as it takes up this light's momentum. Then, stimulated by its recoil motion, atom B emites a half-sized (advanced) wave that travels backwards in time at a speed of 186,000 mps to atom A. Atom A recoils as it takes up this advanced wave's momentum. [See Law of Force]

In order for light to be emitted it must be connected to some future absorber by a two-way retarded-advanced wave handshake process. Because of the need for the presence of absorbers, the absorber theory predicts that if there are none in a particular direction in Space, then light will refuse to shine in that particular direction! If absorber theory is correct, your flashlight would go out whenever you shine it up into the night sky in the direction of an "anti-emission locus" — a region of Space entirely devoid of absorbers of light in the frequency range of your flashlight. In certain other directions, containing only a few absorber atoms, your flashlight would dim, but not go out. Only in those directions in which light was totally absorbed would the flashlight be able to shine at its full brightness." [(Nick Herbert, Faster than Light: Superluminal Loopholes in Physics)]

[See Keely's Law of Force wherein the above paragraph is clearly illustrated.]
[See Keelys Forty Laws numbers 12 through 17.]

The molecular range has less density than the atomic or Etheric. The atomic has a density between the molecular and the Etheric. The Etheric has a much higher density than either of the two others. It is a rule of thumb in vibration science that the higher the density of the media the higher the rate of wave or disturbance propagation through that media. Therefore a vibration set up in the molecular range will induce overtone vibrations in its concurrent Etheric harmonic range which Etheric vibrations will propagate at a much higher rate (appearing nearly instantaneously) while the molecular propagation is just getting started to propagate. This near instantaneous Etheric propagation of sound (longitudinal or compression) waves is the basis behind what is now being called quantum entanglement which is really sympathetic vibration and/or sympathetic oscillation wherein "spooky action at a distance" is witnessed but not understood. [Dale Pond, See Action at a Distance]

See Also


9.1 - Propagation Function and Rates
9.12 - Velocity of Sound and its Propagation Rate are Proportional
9.2 - Wave Velocity Propagation Questions
9.34 - Wave Propagation
17.04 - Speed of Gravity Propagation
Action at a Distance
Compression Wave Velocity
Dynaspheric Force
Giving-Regiving
Law of Force
Pseudo Velocity Shock Spectrum
Quantum Entanglement
Sympathetic Oscillation
Sympathetic Vibration
Sympathy
Table 9.1 - Velocity of Sound in various Materials
Time
Universal Heart Beat
Velocity
Velocity of Sound
Wave
Wave Field

Created by Dale Pond. Last Modification: Friday September 13, 2013 04:27:10 MDT by Dale Pond.