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help me lrn2physics

Name: Anonymous 2009-02-06 23:20

Hey /sci/,

How the hell can something be massless? Someone told me that light is a massless energy particle or some shit like that but that can't be possible because in order for something to actually exist, it must be made of something, and that something has to have mass, regardless of how minute it is right? Or is this correct since light is suppose to have duality? Please edumacate me.

Name: AnOnYmOuS 2U 2009-02-07 22:23

Physics is complicated; allow me to assist you in simplifying it.
Energy chooses motion; the path of least resistance. Energy seeks greater velocities. Everything seeks a means to achieve flexibility or independence. Energy uses other energy with greater velocities to assist it in this motion. Wood uses fire to to move more freely. Dirt uses water to increase the mass of water and the flexibility of the dirt. Both energies assist in both, this is cooperation. Gravity is one of these energies as well. Heat radiates and expands, cold restricts and contracts motion. Greater mass resists less mass in motion. As mass accumulates within the energies that are in motion the velocities increase and the vectors are effected equally with increase or decrease in mass along with velocity.

Also for referential lookup; Copernicus, Newton, Galileo. It is important to study the past to understand the present.
Understand one thing though; modern math and science only measures the reaction after the interaction and transference has taken place. In other words, as with Newton's words, "For every action there is an equal and opposing reaction." What about the action? What about choice? These are the questions I'm researching right now. Possibly even a new math might be created to represent it.

This may not help, but it'll give you a start. GOOD LUCK!!!

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