On Wed, Aug 20, 2025 at 5:22 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

*>> If expanding space can't lengthen the wave length of light then what
> does "expanding space" even mean? What is causing the cosmological red
> shift that we observe? Why do objects that are at a larger distance from
> the Earth have greater red shifts? *


> *> The wave length of light? When you admit you have at best a very
> imprecise definition of this concept, some progress might be possible. But
> not until then. AG  *


*The wavelength of light (electromagnetic waves) produced by a microwave
oven is defined as twice the distance between two melted points of a
chocolate bar that had been heated in a microwave oven that was on a
non-rotating plate. It works because the microwaves are in a box so they
form a standing wave pattern inside the oven, and the waves interfere
constructively every half wavelength and produce more heating at that
point. **If you actually perform that experiment you'll find that the
wavelength is 12.2 cm. *

*If you find that definition is still "at best very imprecise" perhaps you
could give me a better definition of "at best very imprecise" so I could
give you a definition that was a bit better than at best less very
imprecise.*

*Incidentally you can use that same experiment to measure the speed of
light, if you happen to know that all household microwave ovens operate at
a frequency of 2.45 GHz, by using the simple formula c = fλ (where c is the
speed of light, f is frequency, and λ is wavelength).*

*John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>*

rff


>
>

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