- Oct 24, 2017
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So, I was watching a very interesting series on Amazon Prime about light, and it resurrected a question I've had for some time, but had forgotten about it. It goes like this:
Light is a wave. The analogy that is used to explain it is ocean waves. The waves move and eventually break on shore. The "breaking" on shore is the equivalent of light reaching your eye, though it is a very large and "slow" wavelength compared to light. The ocean from which the wave is created is not really moving (at least for the purposes of this discussion).
And the same is true of sound and radio. They are waves. In the case of sound, it moves within other objects, like the ocean waves. i.e. through rock, air and water. It also moves faster through water than air, which is why it is difficult to tell where a sound is coming from underwater. You are not conditioned to interpret the time lag between ears yet. And there is no sound in space because there is nothing to apply a sound wave to.
So, here is the conundrum I have:
The wave breaking on shore is within water which is actually stationary.
The sound wave is within physical objects that are not, themselves really moving.
What stationary "thing" is a radio or light wave causing to vibrate? If there is nothing there to which to apply a wave, light can not travel any more than sound can travel without the existence of air, water, etc. Is there an "existence" in outer space and everywhere else that we can't measure, but it actually exists and carries these waves? Is this the "ether" with which people used to believe space was filled a hundred years ago?
Light is a wave. The analogy that is used to explain it is ocean waves. The waves move and eventually break on shore. The "breaking" on shore is the equivalent of light reaching your eye, though it is a very large and "slow" wavelength compared to light. The ocean from which the wave is created is not really moving (at least for the purposes of this discussion).
And the same is true of sound and radio. They are waves. In the case of sound, it moves within other objects, like the ocean waves. i.e. through rock, air and water. It also moves faster through water than air, which is why it is difficult to tell where a sound is coming from underwater. You are not conditioned to interpret the time lag between ears yet. And there is no sound in space because there is nothing to apply a sound wave to.
So, here is the conundrum I have:
The wave breaking on shore is within water which is actually stationary.
The sound wave is within physical objects that are not, themselves really moving.
What stationary "thing" is a radio or light wave causing to vibrate? If there is nothing there to which to apply a wave, light can not travel any more than sound can travel without the existence of air, water, etc. Is there an "existence" in outer space and everywhere else that we can't measure, but it actually exists and carries these waves? Is this the "ether" with which people used to believe space was filled a hundred years ago?