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Objective World of Physics |
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WEB Page of Tom Besmer |
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This WEB site originated around the year
2000. A new WEB site named A Relativity Challenge was completed
in September 2009. It expands and
updates the articles. http://home.comcast.net/~tjbesmer/A New Concept.htm. It is case sensitive. On this site are found
articles that deal with physics review and the development of a new energy
concept. Reviewed are: Einstein's works, Newton's works,
Maxwell's works, Gravitational Force Field (GFF), Electromagnetic radiation,
Cosmology, Quantum Physics, and the Speed of Light and developed are: a new
energy concept, Frequency shifts and the Speed of light as a function of
wavelength and media (GFF). Modern day technology has been a process. e.g. The vacuum tube came before the transistor, the
transistor is the precursor to the latest in integrated circuits, and
Einstein's works were initiated because he thought that there was a
discrepancy between the works of Newton and Maxwell etc. Einstein, an intellectual giant, has been voted man of the century. One aspect of his Special Theory of Relativity led to the famous E = mc2. He won the Nobel Prize for explaining the photo-electric effect. The papers of this site do not deny any of Einstein's accomplishments. They do however question one of his postulates "The speed of light is a universal constant, relative to nothing". A new energy concept is derived, developed, and introduced. It expands the present day concept of the speed of light. It turns out that the General Theory of Relativity is unnecessary if the time and distance measurements of the Special Theory of Relativity become objective and real. This is true if it can be demonstrated that the speed of light is not a universal constant, an initial condition. Its value varies as function of media and is relative to any movement of the measuring device. These papers deny nothing but they do extend and give a new look at an old thing. |
Physics Review and Innovations by Tom Besmer v Prologue v Einstein’s Universe of Measurement v Speed |