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Mike Lewis
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I think the cosmological redshift, called the "Hubble" redshift which Edwin Hubble discovered and photographed, is caused by quantum decay in light and other electric field) waves, i.e. photoelectric radiation. When emitted, light from a particular elements electronic transitions are at the same energy no matter how distant. They are actually at fairly high energy when emitted, compared with most things in space, and their wavelengths are short. During long time in space (Many millions of years or more) the energy gradually fades in time, into wavetime, and the momentum (related to energy) gradually fades into distance, into wavelength. It works perfectly well in covariant space-time. It explains the redshift fairly accurately, and does not require any complicated "big bang" or "expanding universe" theories. Diffusion already exists in waves, in known propagation, as in a step function on an antenna.
Check out the urls at
http://groups.msn.com/HubbleRedShiftbyPhotonDecay
http://members.chello.nl/~n.benschop/indx-red.htm (a mirror)
I hope you can do something with them.
Mike Lewis
Check out the urls at
http://groups.msn.com/HubbleRedShiftbyPhotonDecay
http://members.chello.nl/~n.benschop/indx-red.htm (a mirror)
I hope you can do something with them.
Mike Lewis
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