What would a negative wavelength of light look like? Would the light be pulled from the back of our eyes? Would it enter the eye on reverse? The article makes the distinction between an emitted light and absorbed light.
How does the frequency stay the same if the speed of light is constant, but the wavelength varies? Is the speed of light simply the frequency? I had thought the speed of light was the flight of photons, not just the wave itself.
If we were to think of the crest of the wave as the same as a photon, a photon would have to change its speed to maintain a constant frequency when changing the wavelength. But, maybe light is more like electrons on a wire. Maybe the photon, like the electron, doesn't really move that fast in order for the energy to travel at the speed of light. After all, electrons only travel around half an inch a minute along a copper wire while their electrical energy is transferred at nearly half the speed of light.
So, when we talk about the speed of light being constant in all frames of reference, we are talking about the apparent energy of light, not the movement of photons.
It's no wonder light behaves like both a particle and a wave. A particle interacts with other particles in order to propagate light waves. No particle, no light wave.
It's amazing that we have effectively disproved the Aether.
-Will