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Science: Astronomy
Far far away matter visiblilized with nodal astrophysics   (+2)  [vote for, against]
giant powerful gamma ray emitters like quasars emit high energy photons Notably, between two of these emitters the gamma rays overlap to produce nodal lower frequencies like visible light where there is matter, this permits matter to be seen at greater than previous distances

a number of giant powerful gamma ray emitters like quasars emit high energy photons Notably, between two of these emitters the gamma rays overlap to produce nodal lower frequencies like visible light, where there is matter

This permits matter to be seen at greater than previous distances

An astrophysicist could look to find hydrogen between high intensity gamma ray emitters glowing with nodal light from frequency overlap. after if works with hydrogen then you see if you can see other kindsof heavier elements like metal at a distance.

It could be the farthest distance planet seer yet.
-- beanangel, May 07 2013

At this time I tend to disagree with this Idea. Two photons interacting generally don't produce another photon; they generally pass right through each other. Keep in mind that Energy must be Conserved. Any production of third photons means that the original photons must lose energy.

Now, I'm quite aware that gamma photons carry vast amounts of energy, compared to visible-light photons. They probably could easily "afford" the energy cost described above. But the MECHANISM for the event seems to me to be lacking. Don't expect Quantum Mechanics to imitate all acoustical phenomena, even if we are dealing with wavicles....
-- Vernon, May 07 2013


Three posts on the same day, I'm wondering what happened?

Has some containment vessel in a secret government laboratory bunker stopped working, or is it some conjunction of the planets thinning the barriers between parallel universes.
-- not_morrison_rm, May 07 2013


overenthusiastic pharma reps.

beanie - cite for pretty well any of the science used as a basis for this post ?
-- FlyingToaster, May 07 2013


What this lacks in clarity it makes up for in incomprehensibility.

Does the effect you think will happen depend on the two gamma emitters being phase-locked or something?
-- MaxwellBuchanan, May 07 2013


at first glance I'd say he's mixed up "low intensity of photons" with "low energy photons", but Michelson-Morley always confused me so it could be something else.
-- FlyingToaster, May 07 2013


Maybe, there is a top secret bored AI supercomputer project running. The rogue program systems then leak blobs of data out over the web without the software engineers noticing.
-- wjt, May 15 2013



random, halfbakery