On the red-shift and decrease of the velocity of light

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In radiation mechanics, it is shown that the photons in the red light rays are rotating slower than the photons in the blue light rays, and that the blowing force in the vicinity of a galaxy (the same kind of surface adsorption force as that causing the weight of a body on the Earth) is not a conservative force. Since it is impossible for a body in the universe to be accelerated to infinite magnitude (physics has no business with infinite) and both the direction and speed of light ray should be changed after passing by a galaxy, the velocity of light rays coming from distant galaxies must decrease, eventually to zero. This leads to the conclusion of that only a finite part of the universe is visible. On the other hand, because a non-conservative force field is a rotational force field, the rotation rates of the photons in light rays must also be changed. Similarly, we can deduce that the rotation rates of the photons in the light rays from distant galaxies must decrease too, which leads to the famous phenomenon of red-shift.

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