A Correction To The Speed of Light?
Source: medium.com
First Evidence Of A Correction To The Speed of LightWhen astronomers first observed light from a supernova arriving 7.7 hours after the neutrinos from the same event, they ignored the evidence. Now one physicist says the speed of light must be slower than Einstein predicted and has developed a theory that explains why
In the early hours of the morning on 24 February 1987, a neutrino detector deep beneath Mont Blanc in northern Italy picked up a sudden burst of neutrinos. Three hours later, neutrino detectors at two other locations picked up a similar burst.
Some 4.7 hours after this, astronomers studying the Large Magellanic cloud that orbits our galaxy, noticed the tell-tale brightening of a blue supergiant star called Sanduleak -69 202, as it became a supernova. Since then, SN 1987a, as it was designated, has become one of the most widely studied supernovas in history (see animation above).
But even today, there is a significant mystery associated with this SN 1987a that astrophysicists have brushed under the carpet. The event consisted of two bursts of neutrinos separated by three hours followed by the first optical signals 4.7 hours later.
Neutrinos and photons both travel at the speed of light and should therefore arrive simultaneously, all else being equal. The mystery is what caused this huge delay of 7.7 hours between the first burst of neutrinos and the arrival of the optical photons.
[...]
Read the full article at: medium.com
Tune into Red Ice Radio:
Rupert Sheldrake - The Science Delusion
Susan Joy Rennison - Hour 1 - Global Energy Leap
Nassim Haramein - The Resonance Project & The Holofractal Theory
Wallace Thornhill - The Electric Universe, The Purple Dawn of Creation & Our Strange Solar System