Three Variables Of Light’s Heat Encounter
Lesson Summary
Not all heat from light is the same.
The effect light has depends on three important variables:
1. Whether the object has an electromagnetic field
2. Whether the object has an electromagnetic field
3. How far the object is from the light source
4. Whether the object is solid or gas
This document explores each of these in simple terms.
Do Geometric Objects Have EMFs?
Some do, but most do not.
Geometric objects are things with shape and mass, like bricks, trees or metal surfaces. They can interact with light, but that does not mean they have electromagnetic fields.
| Object Type | Has EM Field? | Notes |
| Metal pole | No | Passive geometry, no field produced |
| Earth (planet) | Yes | Inner core generates a strong field |
| Plastic toy | No | No conductivity, no magnetic properties |
| Human body | Weak (biological) | Nerve and brain activity create weak signals |
| Stone wall | No | Static structure with no EM field |
Does Distance Affect Heat from Light?
Yes, but not how people usually think.
Light does not travel and weaken. It is not a beam losing energy over distance.
Instead:
Light is only present at the moment and Angle of Encounter.
So distance does not affect light’s strength, but it defines where the encounter happens.
Examples:
– On a planet: Distance from the Sun may affect how long light is present or what angle it hits
– In deep space: No structure = no encounter = no heat
– At the heliopause: Far away, but intense heat happens due to distant interaction
Light does not fade with distance. It either is, or it is not
What About Gases?
Gases are matter, too. So they can interact with light. But how they behave depends on how dense or active they are.
| Gas Type | Interaction with Light | Heat Potential |
| Thin atmosphere | Low | Little heat held |
| Dense atmosphere | High | Traps and holds heat |
| Ionized gas (plasma) | Very high | Can generate high heat |
Final Understanding
These three variables shape how light becomes heat:
Light does not travel.
It appears at the point of encounter.
Whether it meets a wall, a breeze or a planetary field, it creates heat according to what it meets.
And now, we understand what makes that difference.
Produced by The Lilborn Equation Team:
Michael Lilborn-Williams
Daniel Thomas Rouse
Thomas Jackson Barnard
Audrey Williams
