I have shown you the spectra from stars which you reject for made up reasons.
You have shown spectra? What posting a pic of some sample? The question is, what made it that way and where...not whether we see it that way here.
We observe there. We are looking right at it. Those photons come from those stars.
Says you...who know not.
Your rejection of DIRECT observations of distant stars is rather hollow.
Direct is your claim. Prove it.
We can directly observe that it exists at the star. Otherwise, how could the photons get to us?
You can see a star on a screen saver...doesn't mean it is direct!
How could we see supernovae brighten and then fade?
What sort of two bit trick is that? So what. I can make a flashlight do the same. The thing about this thread I find interesting is that we do need time for distances, and sizes. Merely having some little light brighten is of limited meaning!
How could we see planets moving about their star?
I doubt we do. The size required to make it a planet all is based on that time and space being the same thingie.
How could we measure the rotation of pulsars? All of those observations require time AT THE STAR.
No. What we see takes place in our time bubble, and may not reflect time where the pulsar and star are for all we know. Whatever enters our bubble must play out in time as we know it here.
No. We see it there. The photons are coming from that star, not from here.
Photons themselves may be a way light exists here for all we know. That could mean that the light comes from the star....enters our time and space....and starts to exist as photons as we know them...that is what we know and see. Whatever came from the star would now be those photons we see here. There may be parts of light or info of some sort we don't see here also. You may be basing a whole universe on tiny bits of info that is grossly misread!
Maybe? That's all you have? Maybe?
You need to reach way way way up, and see if you can attain maybe. When you can do that, rather than claiming to know when you do not, then you will be going in the right direction.
The wavelength that elements absorb at is a function of their atomic structure and the electromagnetic force which is one of the 4 fundamental atomic forces.
In other words, OUR time bubble forces. Atoms may only work this way here.
If the electromagnetic force were different at the star, then it would produce absorbance lines at different wavelengths than those seen for elements on Earth and those in our Sun.
Not true if whatever enters our bubble starts to exist as an electromagnetic force. We may only see light and atoms as they are here. That need not mean they are that way beyond the bubble we are in.
What we see is that the absorption lines are at the same places as is produced by elements on Earth and in our Sun.
Earth and sun are in the bubble, naturally they also look a certain way.
That means that the star is experiencing the same time and forces that we are.
No. That means you obsess on the light here, and refuse to imagine that it could be different if time itself did not exist as we know it, and therefore space itself also. In our timespace, things take up so much space...and time. In another time...and space, why they may not take up space. Or time in the way we think.
The electromagnetic force is also governed by the speed of light.
In other words, the forces in the bubble work a certain way.
Change the speed of light and you change the force.
No need to change the speed of light in the bubble. Remember, speed involves time. Speed involves space. Speed of light here also involves the forces in place here.
Go out on a cloudy day. The diffuse light that see is being absorbed by local gases from the closest star to Earth. A foggy day will do the same. If distant starlight is being absorbed by local gases then we will see a diffuse light and not a sharp pin prick of light.
That is vague and cloudy. Many things can 'diffuse' light!
All of the observations support it. If you think I am wrong, then show me a single observation where this is not the case.
Have you provided a single observation we can show wrong or right yet? We wait.
You tried to claim that the prism was producing the absorption lines. They aren't.
I pointed out that the prism here scatters the light so we can see those lines actually. That tells us little, except that light in the time bubble we are in, when scattered, is seen a certain way.
What in this link would you like to offer us exactly? I think we know light has those lines....so?