Re: [Vo]:photons

2021-10-11 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
Just one Remark as I basically agree with Bob. The only (tiny) perturbation we see is in the energy transfer of differently polarized photons. See also Goos Haenchen effect. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goos%E2%80%93H%C3%A4nchen_effect A photon is pure magnetic flux that can carry two

Re: [Vo]:photons

2021-10-11 Thread Bob Higgins
Hi Robin, See my answers inline below ... Bob On Sun, Oct 10, 2021 at 3:56 PM Robin wrote: > In reply to Bob Higgins's message of Sun, 10 Oct 2021 13:58:12 -0600: > Hi Bob, > [snip] > >I believe photons to be corpuscles having more than one cycle (sort of > like > >a gaussian envelope) but

Re: [Vo]:photons

2021-10-10 Thread Robin
In reply to Bob Higgins's message of Sun, 10 Oct 2021 13:58:12 -0600: Hi Bob, [snip] >I believe photons to be corpuscles having more than one cycle (sort of like >a gaussian envelope) but finite in size. The envelope is a soliton >solution supported by the nonlinearity of the aether; which is

Re: [Vo]:photons

2021-10-10 Thread Bob Higgins
I believe photons to be corpuscles having more than one cycle (sort of like a gaussian envelope) but finite in size. The envelope is a soliton solution supported by the nonlinearity of the aether; which is different from a linear EM excitation of the aether. Each photon contains a fixed energy

[Vo]:photons

2021-10-10 Thread Robin
Hi, Photons have a cycle time(T) = 1/frequency. Planks constant has the dimension of energy x time. So the energy of single cycle photon would be h/T = h x frequency, which is the formula for photon energy. What does this mean? It means that either the photon energy formula only describes the