The "measured" light speed cannot be "absolute" one, by Romano Amodeo

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amoram

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Aug 17, 2008, 12:46:33 PM8/17/08
to physics science of RA
The "measured" light speed cannot be "absolute" one

When our scientists did introduce the light sped REALLY MEASURED and
thought to have respected Einstein (that said of an ABSOLUTE speed and
not of a REAL one), the mistake of the system of unitary count, and
the INCREDIBLE FACT to haven't considered the quantitative incidence
of the electromagnetic FRONT of the light - in the determination of
the ABSOLUTE SPEED - got this great MISTAKE of a "c" speed measured
different from 300.000.000. m/s.

The light speed measures in atomic units, in Å, the 10^10 units of 1
m.
Since the UNITARY FRONT is 10^2, all the length is 10^10 Å : 10^2 =
10^8 Å.
This length is acting only in the direction x, while in the volume we
have the Tern xyz.
So we must have 3 x 10^8 Angstrom, every atomic unitary time of 10^-10
s.
Multiplying by 10^10 the 10^-10 s, we have 1 s, and the Angstrom,
multiplied it also by 10^10, becomes 1 m, so 3 x 10^8 m/s.

Romano Amodeo
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