This sounds like a type of ether. If light moved through a medium then you would be able to determine the speed of light relative to the ether. There is no variation in the speed which indicates that there is no medium or ether that the light propagates through.
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It seems that light can be represented as a helical wave produced/traced by a particle. Equation of a helix in parametric form is: x = a sin(t) ; y = a cos(t) ; z = b t ; When you plot this graph, you can see that the view from yz-plane shows it as a cosine curve, while the view from xz-plane shows it as a sine curve. This explains the fact that light can be represented as a sine as well as a cosine curve at the same instant. Also, this explains the wave-particle duality. p.s. : Its like telling light consist of particles, but who knows! Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!
How exactly do you think this explains wave-particle duality? A cosine wave is just a sine wave phase shifted by pi/2. There is nothing more "particle-like" about one versus the other, so far as I can see.
Completely agree, but will note that a "helical wave" can be decomposed into two plane waves and conversely.
Indeed. But our friend is making a claim about wave-particle duality, which is something else. I'm not sure he or she has thought it through.
I meant to say that light is made of particles, not waves. Its only their travelling path which is viewed as a light wave. Even if so, it travels in a helical path. As billy T said, it can be decomposed into 2 plane waves, hence its parametric equation.
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