31 Jul
2006
31 Jul
'06
2:34 p.m.
On 7/31/06, franktaw@netscape.net <franktaw@netscape.net> wrote:
After reading the article, I agree with Bill.
Such materials would still be repelled by EM radiation. Less, perhaps, than some other materials, at least in some cases. But the basic range for this repulsion is from a maximum for a perfect mirror, to zero for a perfectly transparent object. These materials would fall into that range.
The reverse Doppler shift doesn't make any sense to me at all.
Franklin T. Adams-Watters
I found a better explanation; it's only *within* the medium that you'd see a reverse doppler effect. http://www.aip.org/pnu/2000/split/pnu476-1.htm -- Mike Stay metaweta@gmail.com http://math.ucr.edu/~mike