And on the subject of coincidence, it was reading this thread last night that had caused me some insomnia. While laying awake in the semi-darkness my thoughts lead me to thinking about why stars sparkle, as apposed to twinkling because of atmospheric disruption. It was then that quite suddenly the low battery indicator on my central heating control/clock began to blink, on and off.
The startling coincidence was how my thoughts about the way the human eye and a total eclipse of the Sun share certain similarities. At least in the visual sense, the pupil being surrounded by the iris and the cornea, just like the Sun shining onto the dark side of the Moon to create the corona of the eclipse. The rods inside the eye may very well break apart the beam of light like the spokes and the hub of a wheel. To help the eye be more selective, as well as a protective function stopping too much light flooding the pupil. Hence sparkle, and not twinkle!
The fact that my thoughts were interrupted by the low battery indicator only fuelled my curiosity and imagination.
And so, as the light blinked on and off from the corner of the room, I wondered how much of science is built on coincidences. The discovery of ultra-violet light, purely by accident/coincidence, springs to mind. And not forgetting Alfred Einstein's greatest discovery of how light bends around the Sun, when a car drove by him at nighttime as he was crossing a road!
Thinking about light and time led me to suppose that a beam of light may share similar behavioural patterns to an electrical current, ie, hole flow. And hence a portion of light hitting the eye (at night) sparkles because the majority of the light is actually traveling away from the eye in the opposite direction. Time displaces the light beam into the centre of the sparkle (hub of the wheel), as if it was vanishing into a micro-black hole.
But as I was trying to decide on the possibility of daylight and nightlight having a differential bandwidth and speed, I curled up and fell fast asleep.
