Wednesday, 18 November 2015

EMR travelling through space, basic visualization of rotation matrix

LAST UPDATED ON 2019-04-20

These are basic drawings of what I explain in my theory. This should help visualize the electromagnetic force as the result of total rotation. It should also help visualize how an excess of rotation travels distance through space, stretching its wavelength due to gravity, until it ceases to exist.


These example show how a point of light (excess of rotation) travels in space. Rotation is always shared outwards from the source. The direction of rotation of the particles depends on the direction of rotation of the source. I am talking about the total sum in this case. This is what I mean when I talk about 'total rotation'. As the light travels in space, gravity constantly slows down the absorbtion of the rotation by acting as a resistance to motion. This has the effect of increasing the wavelength and decreasing the energy in the photon until it completely disappears. This effect is amplified when objects are moving away from each other. For example, the increase in distance between objects decreases the quantity of rotation absorbed by the particles in the environment due to a weaker gravitational force. This results in a noticeable effect commonly know as 'redshift'.






These examples show that every EMR wave is constructed from the combined rotation of all the mass. This means that at any point in space, electromagnetism equals a function of rotational energy (motion), gravity and distance. This rotational matrix results in the existence of the electromagnetic force. Here are two other examples showing that the same particles can participate in the existence of multiple photons at the same time. This is the result of different quantities of rotation as well as different angles adding up together to form multiple points at different places in space.