The Uncertainty Principle

It says that the velocity and the position of a particle cannot be measured simultaneously.           That's not true. A particle has a specific velocity and specific position at any given time. Humans do not have the technology to measure it but it is possible. The velocity and the position of a particle could be measured simultaneously if we knew the direction, velocity, mass, shape, size and angle at which the photons heat the particle. It's not impossible to predict it, just improbable. We would have to also know everything about photons too. Photons may have one charge and everything another.

                 The space is dark because as the photons of light travel there were no particles to hit and "enlighten". Hence, the Sun is not illuminating the space, but only matter. In the atmosphere at night, light a lamp. As the particles of light leave the lamp they crash or give off their energy to particles of gas creating light. As they move farther there is less of them left or if they lose their energy they give less light. They may explode because of their enormous speed.

The speed of light was measured in 17- th century in France in 30-km tube! That means that the light would travel 10 000 TIMES that tube in one second! How on Earth somebody in 17- th century could possibly count the number of trips the light beam did?! In 20 - th century scientists believe that the number is essentially correct.

                                                                                                    

 

 

Light

We see light because, photons hit other particles giving them more energy and temperature, so they radiate at higher frequencies giving off light. When photons hit particles they create a “chain reaction”. It gets weaker as the photon's energy is divided between more and more particles.

The white light does not consist out of different wavelengths. Different colors resulting from the splitting of the white light's beam is result of splitting. The light beam splits because, the sine light wave hits the prism at different angles.

 

 

 

 

                                                                             PAWEL KOLASA