Message from @SunRazor

Discord ID: 632055501378551835


2019-10-11 03:19:38 UTC  

So I'm just offering an alternative explanation to the red shifts observed in distant galaxies.

2019-10-11 03:19:47 UTC  

It *is real*

2019-10-11 03:20:03 UTC  

yeah, but you're altering physics to do so

2019-10-11 03:20:04 UTC  

no shame in anime with subs @Matt77

2019-10-11 03:20:05 UTC  

It can either be doppler shift, or it can be what I have been explaining.

2019-10-11 03:20:12 UTC  

hmm

2019-10-11 03:20:44 UTC  

No he said that you believe anything you don't understand that's why I said no subtitles

2019-10-11 03:20:45 UTC  

I'm not the one alterning physics. I don't have control over the laws of physics or the influence that massive bodies have to the vacuum around them.

2019-10-11 03:20:56 UTC  

i like that you're looking for answer to gravity. i just dont think thats it chief lol

2019-10-11 03:21:09 UTC  

What is a red shift

2019-10-11 03:21:26 UTC  

that's a false analogy, because if you watch raw, you're nothing short of a god @Matt77

2019-10-11 03:21:32 UTC  

so you pretty much know everything

2019-10-11 03:21:32 UTC  

delta lambda / lambda

2019-10-11 03:21:38 UTC  

<:snapsnap:484956825863585792>

2019-10-11 03:21:51 UTC  

they dont know what that means

2019-10-11 03:22:06 UTC  

laymans

2019-10-11 03:22:07 UTC  

the change in wavelength divided by the original wavelength

2019-10-11 03:22:23 UTC  

still means nothing to laymans

2019-10-11 03:22:33 UTC  

@Matt77 I meant in terms of this type of stuff

2019-10-11 03:22:42 UTC  

👍 <:snapsnap:484956825863585792> <:cool3:625748951458512916>

2019-10-11 03:22:54 UTC  

when light is emitted from a source it has a wavelength to it

2019-10-11 03:23:10 UTC  

if the object is moving away

2019-10-11 03:23:10 UTC  

<:cool3:625748951458512916>

2019-10-11 03:23:12 UTC  

it redshifts

2019-10-11 03:23:14 UTC  

when you measure the wavelength, how does it compare to its original wavelength when it was emitted?

2019-10-11 03:23:25 UTC  

if its moving closer it uuuh

2019-10-11 03:23:34 UTC  

Bruh I don't do physics

2019-10-11 03:23:34 UTC  

blueshifts or something

2019-10-11 03:23:34 UTC  

you subtract the observed wavelength from the known original wavelength

2019-10-11 03:23:41 UTC  

then divide that difference by the original wavelength

2019-10-11 03:23:51 UTC  

i don't know why light doesn't get tired flying around all day

2019-10-11 03:23:55 UTC  

I do bio so this is like doing a Spanish test

2019-10-11 03:23:59 UTC  

blue shift is the difference in frequency divided by the original frequency

2019-10-11 03:24:12 UTC  

because light doesn't fly

2019-10-11 03:24:15 UTC  

light propagates

2019-10-11 03:24:16 UTC  

Light has endurance 100

2019-10-11 03:24:17 UTC  

because light is made out of nonliving things

2019-10-11 03:24:22 UTC  

🚶

2019-10-11 03:24:26 UTC  

<:confused:625494374402228244>

2019-10-11 03:24:30 UTC  

Obviously agility 10 and stamina 10

2019-10-11 03:24:30 UTC  

Huh?