The test again:electromagnetic waves)...Moving Observer. Let's say you, the observer, now move toward the source with velocity Vo. You encounter more waves per unit time than you did before. Relative to you, the waves travel at a higher speed: V' = V+Vo. The frequency
An observer starts moving toward the light source with speed v:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=bg7O4rtlwEE
Frequency at the moving observer shifts from f=c/λ to f'=(c+v)/λ.
Speed of light relative to the moving observer shifts from c to ?
Wavelength shifts from λ to ?
Remember: (frequency) = (speed of light)/(wavelength)
Here is a clue:
"The Doppler effect is the shift in frequency of a wave that occurs when the wave source, or the detector of the wave, is moving. Applications of the Doppler effect range from medical tests using ultrasound to radar detectors and astronomy (with
Einsteinians would readily produce this answer:scientists teach that the wavelength is invariable in this scenario, but the hypnotised scientific community is unable to see that invariable wavelength is fatal for Einstein's relativity (and for modern physics as a whole).
Speed of light relative to the moving observer shifts from c to c (there is no shift: the speed of light is invariable).
The problem is that the above answer entails an obviously preposterous answer for the wavelength:
Wavelength shifts from λ to λ'=λc/(c+v).
That the motion of the observer changes the wavelength of the incoming light from λ to λ'=λc/(c+v) is too preposterous, even by the standards of the Einstein Cult. Accordingly, Einsteinians never teach this deep insight. On the other hand, sane
"Thus, the moving observer sees a wave possessing the same wavelength...but a different frequency...to that seen by the stationary observer." http://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/315/Waveshtml/node41.htmlincrease in frequency is a result of the observer encountering more wavelengths in a given time." http://a-levelphysicstutor.com/wav-doppler.php
"Vo is the velocity of an observer moving towards the source. This velocity is independent of the motion of the source. Hence, the velocity of waves relative to the observer is c + Vo...The motion of an observer does not alter the wavelength. The
"The wavelength is staying the same in this case." https://youtube.com/watch?v=MHepfIIsKcE
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