by Dutchman » Tue Oct 23, 2007 3:16 pm
I'll have to agree with the previous post. What you are refering to is dark matter, i.e., positron, antiproton, antineutron. Photons are not matter, they are energy which doesn't fall into the same category. Photons are only subject to constructive and destructive intereference and can only be cancelled out in so far as the wavelengths of two photons at the same frequency, but at opposite points in their wavelength, or period if you want to equate their path to a sine wave type trajectory, will negate one another.
The reason that the term dark energy has gained popularity is because it is a new type of energy that we know very little about outside of the effect that it seems to be having on the universe. As of now the current belief is that dark energy has the opposite effect of gravity and repels two objects with mass. The question on most cosmologists minds now is how dark energy will behave, whether its influence increases as the distance between objects increase or whether it will reach some balance with the force of gravity. This is the question left to be answered that will determine whether the big rip is simply an academic exercise and a philosophical ponderance, or a model of the future of our universe.
I'll have to agree with the previous post. What you are refering to is dark matter, i.e., positron, antiproton, antineutron. Photons are not matter, they are energy which doesn't fall into the same category. Photons are only subject to constructive and destructive intereference and can only be cancelled out in so far as the wavelengths of two photons at the same frequency, but at opposite points in their wavelength, or period if you want to equate their path to a sine wave type trajectory, will negate one another.
The reason that the term dark energy has gained popularity is because it is a new type of energy that we know very little about outside of the effect that it seems to be having on the universe. As of now the current belief is that dark energy has the opposite effect of gravity and repels two objects with mass. The question on most cosmologists minds now is how dark energy will behave, whether its influence increases as the distance between objects increase or whether it will reach some balance with the force of gravity. This is the question left to be answered that will determine whether the big rip is simply an academic exercise and a philosophical ponderance, or a model of the future of our universe.