--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
<mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> , "Robert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
>  (snip)
> I know a little about this stuff, so let me give this a try...
>
> > Please explain a superconductor to me?
> A superconductor is a conductor of electricity which has no
> resistance. It is implied in a state of Absolute Zero, would produce
> a structure which would offer no resistance to an electric current.
> >
> > Please explain a wave in a field?
> The field and the wave in the field are one and the same.
> The wave produces the field, and vice-versa.
> >
> > Please explain an electromagnetic field?
> An electromagnetic field is produced from electicity and magnetism.
> >
> > Please explain how an EEG machine works?
> Picks up minute variations of voltage, produced by the brain, by the
> firing of neurons of the brain.
> >
> > Please explain how an electromagnetic fluctuation can travel?
> The electromagnetic field travels at the speed of light.
> A change in the field, which travel at the speed of light, makes the
> field change and because of the infinite quality of the field,
> fluctuations appear to be spontaneous.
> >
> > Please explain how any fluctuation/energy could travel far?
> Because they travel at the speed of light, and as one approaches the
> speed of light, time ceases to exist, as we know it.
> This is how consiousness which can be compared to light, effects at a
> distance.
> >
> > Please explain how a laser beam works and how it can hit the moon,
> > whereas a regular flashlight cannot?
> Laser light is different than regular light, in that it is produced
> through an exact synchrony of a wave of light.
> Regular light is not diffused and not synchonized.
> >
> > Please explain what exactly is a photon?
> A photon is something that physicist came up with to explain light in
> terms of a particle. A particle of light is called a photon. Because
> light acts sometimes as a particle and sometimes as a wave, it was
> easier to explain light in this way, although light itself is an
> absolute of the Universe.
> >
> > Please explain quantum wave functions that are not coherent and why
> they
> > dissipate?
> If waves are not aligned, then one wave can cancel out another...
> Like the waves of the Ocean, one can cancel another out, if is is
> opposite in it's size and timing...
> Likewise a wave that is in sync with another wave will increase and
> support each other.
> >
> > Please explain how coherent quatum wave functions, by definition
> could
> > travel further (as in a laser beam?
> Because the waves are in tune with one another and continue to
> support each other through time and space.
> R.G.
>


Good answers overall ! Maybe light being absolute is questionable, since
neither light nor gravity is no longer thought to be absolute. Time is
now thought to not exist. The laser beam compared to flashlight answer
you gave is the key .

OffWorld

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