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Just like light should not even alter its wave length because, hey, its the almighty light.

2007-10-24 09:09:22 · 2 answers · asked by spencer 2 in Science & Mathematics Physics

2 answers

I don't think any well known scientist living in this century would disagree. There might be someone from the 17th or 18th century.

The Doppler effect can be used to measure speed with radar. Next time a cop pulls you over, you can try arguing that the radar is wrong because light's wave length doesn't change. I think he'd give you a very funny look and a pretty big ticket.

2007-10-24 09:36:04 · answer #1 · answered by Frst Grade Rocks! Ω 7 · 1 0

mild coming in the direction of us shifts to pink, on an identical time as mild leaving us shifts to blue. you could could desire to force backwards on the yellow mild till it shifts to green, then force forward. yet which will in turn make the mild pink lower back one you get close sufficient. you're continually caught on the mild. only wait it out, dude.

2017-01-04 09:40:08 · answer #2 · answered by nerio 4 · 0 0

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