Isnt it conserved? Why cant you see it anymore?

  • Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org
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    13 hours ago

    It goes into your fridge.

    Everybody knows that.

    Don’t believe me? Just open the door, and there it is!

  • Daemon Silverstein@calckey.world
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    21 hours ago

    @cheese_greater@lemmy.world !asklemmy@lemmy.world

    In order to understand what happens with the light from our earthly shelters, one needs to look up. See those stars shining all across the night sky? Those celestial bodies aren’t where we see them, and many of them are long gone. So we don’t see the stars, we see their “ghosts”, compelled to physically wander through the spacetime continuum.

    Roughly speaking, EM radiation (and, by extension, visible light) travels indefinitely to the far reaches of cosmos once it’s emitted. It’ll definitely decay and become fainter and fainter (Inverse Square Law), eventually blending with other faint signals also scattered and wandering through the space. We call it “noise”, which is nothing but the sum of all cosmic EM activity that once happened since the dawn of time, especially (but not limited to) that of Big Bang, as “Cosmic Microwave Background”, which is still around (it’s just that our home equipment, as digital sets, are designed to ignore such noise, but people used to be able to tune into it with the early analog TV and radio receptors).

    Now, there’s a maxim from Hermeticism that says “As above, so below”: just as we see the past from cosmos whenever we look at the skies, some hypotethical extraterrestrial civilization at hundreds of thousands of light-years from here would see (supposing they exist and supposing that they got highly advanced optics) a Pale Blue Dot with some minuscule flame spots on its surface, the bonfires once lit by Homo erectus when they began tinkering with fire. Those extraterrestrials won’t see the Earth as it currently is relative to the Sun, which also won’t be where it currently is relative to Milky Way, which also won’t be where it currently is relative to Laniakea.

    Those extraterrestrials definitely won’t see our desperate signals begging for them to beam us up (from the former Arecibo transmission all the way to someone lonely blinking their home lights right now desperately trying to call the extraterrestrial attention): we’re all screaming to the void, and the void screams back as a silent noise from long-gone celestial bodies. The cosmos is a big cemetery where ghosts are hauntingly compelled to roam around without getting anywhere (still they sometimes stumble upon other ghosts, when energy is absorbed by all sorts of cosmic matter both here and out there).

    In the end, this is what happens with your home light every time you turn it off: it becomes some kind of “electromagnetic ghost” electrically “summoned” in your room and unleashed to the outer space, not to haunt, but to be haunted and devoured by the ineffable darkness of the abyss, where it will spend the eternity going everywhere to reach nowhere…

  • Denjin@lemmings.world
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    1 day ago

    It’s still there, light switches are just tools to trick your brain into reading more or less light.

  • 7uWqKj@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I builds up in the wire just behind the switch, to be released the next time the switch is opened. That’s why it’s so blindingly bright for a second when you turn on the light when using the bathroom at night (the light having been off for several hours).

    • anon6789@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Putting a dimmer switch in the bathroom has probably been the best cheap quality of life upgrade ever.

      I have it set so when pushed all the way down is just enough voltage to turn the LED bulbs on, not fully off, so there’s no guesswork where to set it when stumbling in during the night or first thing in the AM.

      Have it dimmed real low while showering and getting ready for bed to get my eyes used to the dark, flip it all the way down as I leave, and then as I wake up in the AM I can bump it up a little to gradually wake me up. Life changing!

  • WoodScientist@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    It gets absorbed and reemitted by the walls of the room. Its reemitted as infrared light, due to the temperature of the walls. Eventually it just all ends up as heat.

    The answer to the question “where did the energy go?” is “heat” 99% of the time.

    • leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      14 hours ago

      Well, some of it might manage to go out the window.

      Most of that will probably hit another building, or a tree, or the ground, or something, and get absorbed (and permitted), but some of it might not hit anything solid and carry on into the atmosphere… where a good part of it will end up hitting a cloud, or a nitrogen atom, or a pigeon… but some might end up in space. And carry on for aeons, into the cosmos.

    • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      And the remaining 1% of the time it is, “It excited an electron in this atom into a higher state, which will drop down later and emit some radiation, which will then hit something and then be converted to heat.”

      Every once in a blue moon it’s, “It overloaded this atom’s nucleus and now that atom is two atoms. And some heat.” Those are always fun times.

      But at the end of the day the answer is always heat… eventually.