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An infinite force in a finite Universe?
Message
De
27/06/2008 15:15:03
Jay Johengen
Altamahaw-Ossipee, Caroline du Nord, États-Unis
 
 
À
27/06/2008 15:11:32
Information générale
Forum:
Business
Catégorie:
Rédaction créative
Divers
Thread ID:
01325051
Message ID:
01327349
Vues:
14
>>>Problem is it doesn't. It slows down and dies out.
>>
>>If the source of the light is the same distance away, why would the light slow and die out?
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>
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>Right now, the atoms in my fingers are made of electrons and nuclei.
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>The force that holds them to each other is Electromagnetism.
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>Light is also Electromagnetism
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>Let me ask you this.
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>The Universe gives us a force to hold atoms together.
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>Do you really think the Universe would also ensure that the Electromagnetic force not only causes interactions between local atoms, but between atoms trillions of light years apart?
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>It seems like the EM force has a job description, one that's pretty essential for life (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropic_principle).
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>Why it would have to have an infinite range?
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>The forces that hold nuclei together don't have a range past the nucleus.
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>Why doesn't the force that holds electrons in the atom have a similar range?
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>It does, we just haven't come to grips with it yet.
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