>>14308067But where does light come from?
Why the weird 90 degree 90 degree thing?
To what degrees do protons and neutrons interact with light?
To what degrees do waves of light interact with waves of light, why might many coherent light signals pass through relatively the same space and not interfere?
Are they so fine grain, or is it that when many approach one another in the same space, they just slightly push one another out of the way, one goes over one goes under, if there are a million they never collide and destroy one another, they always weave, under over, side to side;
Just intersting, if 4 approaching one another, 2 from one side, 2 from the other, imagine, 2 coming head on with the other 2 right next to them, so say the 1 and 1 approach head on, they don't collide thier faces, they some how manage to slide out of one anothers way, and if the other 2 were experiencing the same need to slide, and say if they were next to one another, very close, (if 4 waves would be unrealistic being so close, imagine it being among 4 trillion), and they are going to meet at the same time, the 2 uncoming pairs that is, so they both meet head on at the same time directly next to one another, the left wave on the right pair slides to the left to avoid the right wave;
The right wave of the left pair at the same time slides to the right to avoid the left wave of the left pair.
And so instantly sliding into one another, they still would not hit head on, they would find a way to instsntly slide off one another an find the empty space;
Which was all ready my attempted point, what if the condition is that there is no empty space to slide into.
What if you shine high powered flash lights, composed as a sphere, at a common center? How would the light interact? No way to detect what is going on in the center?
What if you did that same thing but instead of flash lights it was radio waves, with detailed encoding; would all the signals consistently reach the other side?