![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: gravity, revisited, speed |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#91
|
|||
|
|||
|
Tom Roberts wrote on Sat, 12 Apr 2008 16:41:42 +0000:
Only if one accepts at face value your claims that most of classical physics is wrong. If you really think that then let me say you misunderstood i said. Tom Roberts wrote on Fri, 11 Apr 2008 15:36:41 -0500: The experiments have said NOTHING WHATSOEVER about whether or not the "geometrical interpretation" [#] of GR is valid. The experiments have said that the EQUATIONS of GR are valid (for their specific measurements). None current experiment verifies: a1) gravity is due to spacetime curvature b1) interactions are retarded because same experiments can be explained using a2) gravity like a force b2) instantenous fundamental interactions Sure. As I said before, experiments cannot distinguish between interpretations like this. We are doing some advance here. [That assumes your second theory is GR in disguise. If not, it merely shows that the two theories cannot be distinguished by these experiments.] No, you were said that GR arises like an approximation to the more fundamental theory. However, recent experiments and theoretical advances are neither supporting the idea of retarded interactions nor the idea of gravity as geometry. But they aren't refuting it, either, which is the relevant point. Wrong. They are doing it for both *gravitational* and electromagnetic interactions. Even if you cannot read references (which was you complaint time ago) you can read the titles: "Action at a distance as a full-value solution of Maxwell equations" "Necessity of simultaneous co-existence of instantaneous and retarded interactions in classical electrodynamics." "Experimental evidence on non-applicability of the standard retardation condition to bound magnetic fields" Etc. E.g. in my recent work "Newtonian limit difficulties of GR", I analize both mathematical advancements and experiments invalidating a geometrical approach to gravity. Several mistakes of Carlip PLA paper are revised in a specific section. Both (geometry and retardation) are approximated concepts. Almost certainly -- it's highly likely that GR itself is an approximation. But to what? To a more fundamental theory of gravity based in a Liouville space extension of dynamics. E.g. the retarded local tensor potentials h_ab(x,t) are derived up second order (first order mixed brackets "[}") in the local approximation for pure states sigma -- delta-6N. The (geo)metric stucture and even the own concept of spacetime arises like approximation in a well defined limit. Thus geoemtric GR is an approximation to a more general description of classical graviational phenomena. Except that to date nobody has presented such a "more general description". Completely false. Several people has done and published in top journals including gravitation specific journals. You simply are not aware (as usual). For instance, the description given in Classical Relativistic Many-Body Dynamics. 1999: Springer. Trump, Matthew A; Schieve, William C. for gravitation is *not* reducible to GR. In fact, authors rejected both field and metric theories because of their known flaws. Today, i sent the outline for a generalization of the theory in that monograph to a Texas colleague who will discuss it with prof Schieve. The draft is "Chubikalo and Smirnov-Rueda dualism: Foundation and generalizations" and in page 30 explains how one would generalize the 8N potentials on the cited monograph V = (m / (SQRT X^2 - c^2T^2)) -- [Tr_E V sigma_E}_8N General relativity is derived after doing several simplifications from the more general theory. My point is that one cannot possibly MEASURE the "gravitational force" on an orbiting satellite. One can certainly measure geometrical aspects of its path and INFER a "gravitational force". But that's insufficient to the task you and Van Flandern have set out for yourselves, because the geometry of GR can also explain such measurements. Completely wrong once again. -- http://canonicalscience.org/en/misce...guidelines.txt |
| Ads |
|
#92
|
|||
|
|||
|
Juan R. González-Ãlvarez wrote:
[...] Let me for the moment suspend disbelief and stipulate that everything you said is true and accepted by the entire physics community, and that you and your references have described a complete and self-consistent theory worthy to be the successor to GR as the best theory of gravity. In that context, please answer this one point: My point is that one cannot possibly MEASURE the "gravitational force" on an orbiting satellite. Completely wrong once again. So prove it, by describing precisely how one MEASURES the "gravitational force" on an orbiting satellite. Don't give blank references to unspecified literature, just give a basic description of the method. A one-sentence statement of the basic principle of the measurement will do. And please don't use jargon or undefined notation, but follow the "colloquium test" -- give a description that is understandable to a graduate student or postdoc not expert in the field. Tom Roberts |
|
#93
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 7, 10:39*pm, wrote in
sci.physics.relativity: TomVan Flandern wrote: "TomRoberts" writes: [Roberts]: For those unwilling to wade through the umpteenth time this has *been discussed, here is the bottom line: ... None of the experiments Van Flandern cites refute GR ... * * I am sorry you can't keep your correspondents straight. For the umpteenth time, I agree with GR as a mathematical theory. Nothing I've said here is in any way a refutation of GR. There is a rigorous proof, using the full Einstein field equations (and not just a low-order approximation that can hide the underlying structure), that gravitational influence propagates at the speed of light: Robert J Low, "Speed Limits in General Relativity," Class. Quant. Grav. 16 (1999) 543, http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9812067. *If you really "agree[d] with GR as a mathematical theory," the argument would be over. Steve Carlip But, Carlip Carlip, in a gravitational field the speed of light is VARIABLE, as Divine Albert said in 1920 and as you have been teaching in Einstein zombie world for quite a long time: http://groups.google.com/group/sci.p...bd437bc899633? Steve Carlip, Aug 1 1997: "In special relativity, the speed of light is constant when measured in any *inertial* frame. In general relativity, the appropriate generalization is that the speed of light is constant in any freely falling reference frame (in a region small enough that tidal effects can be neglected). In this passage, Einstein is not talking about a freely falling frame, but rather about a frame at rest relative to a source of gravity. In such a frame, the speed of light can differ from c, basically because of the effect of gravity (spacetime curvature) on clocks and rulers." Steve Carlip http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physic...of_light..html Steve Carlip: "Einstein went on to discover a more general theory of relativity which explained gravity in terms of curved spacetime, and he talked about the speed of light changing in this new theory. In the 1920 book "Relativity: the special and general theory" he wrote: ". . . according to the general theory of relativity, the law of the constancy of the velocity of light in vacuo, which constitutes one of the two fundamental assumptions in the special theory of relativity [. . .] cannot claim any unlimited validity. A curvature of rays of light can only take place when the velocity of propagation of light varies with position." Since Einstein talks of velocity (a vector quantity: speed with direction) rather than speed alone, it is not clear that he meant the speed will change, but the reference to special relativity suggests that he did mean so. THIS INTERPRETATION IS PERFECTLY VALID AND MAKES GOOD PHYSICAL SENSE...." Now Carlip Carlip, even if that "gravitational influence propagates at the speed of light" had been rigorously proved, Einstein zombie world wants to know (or may ask some day): If the propagation of the selfsame gravitational influence is accompanied by propagation of light, the speed of this light will decrease perhaps, at least so you and Divine Albert suggest (after all, you measure both speeds in "a frame at rest relative to a source of gravity", that is, the initial source of gravity, before the beginning of the propagation). Will the speed of the gravitational influence decrease as well? Do you know how to camouflage the problem? Pentcho Valev |
|
#94
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 11, 10:36*pm, Tom Roberts wrote in
sci.physics.relativity: [I'm picking just the main points.] Tom Van Flandern wrote: "Tom Roberts" writes: ... None of the experiments Van Flandern cites refute GR ... I agree with GR as a mathematical theory. Nothing I've said here is in any way a refutation of GR. As Carlip said, if you really understood what you just said, this argument would be over. Experiments can test theories. Can experiments test single statements Roberts Roberts? This question sounds silly and yet it is important because some Divine Juggler may place two contradictory statements - e.g. that the speed of light is both constant and variable - in his Divine Theory and then experiments may always confirm Divine Juggler's Divine Theory. Just answer this Roberts Roberts: Is the gravitational redshift factor 1+V/c^2 experimentally confirmed by Pound and Rebka consistent with the statement that the speed of light in a gravitational field is variable and obeys Einstein's 1911 equation c'=c(1+V/c^2), or is it consistent with the statement that the speed of light is a gravitational field is constant and obeys the equation c'=c? But first learn what your Masters teach Roberts Roberts: http://www.physlink.com/Education/AskExperts/ae13.cfm "So, it is absolutely true that the speed of light is _not_ constant in a gravitational field [which, by the equivalence principle, applies as well to accelerating (non-inertial) frames of reference]. If this were not so, there would be no bending of light by the gravitational field of stars....Indeed, this is exactly how Einstein did the calculation in: 'On the Influence of Gravitation on the Propagation of Light,' Annalen der Physik, 35, 1911. which predated the full formal development of general relativity by about four years. This paper is widely available in English. You can find a copy beginning on page 99 of the Dover book 'The Principle of Relativity.' You will find in section 3 of that paper, Einstein's derivation of the (variable) speed of light in a gravitational potential, eqn (3). The result is, c' = c0 ( 1 + V / c^2 ) where V is the gravitational potential relative to the point where the speed of light c0 is measured." http://www.blazelabs.com/f-g-gcont.asp "The first confirmation of a long range variation in the speed of light travelling in space came in 1964. Irwin Shapiro, it seems, was the first to make use of a previously forgotten facet of general relativity theory -- that the speed of light is reduced when it passes through a gravitational field....Faced with this evidence, Einstein stated:"In the second place our result shows that, according to the general theory of relativity, the law of the constancy of the velocity of light in vacuo, which constitutes one of the two fundamental assumptions in the special theory of relativity and to which we have already frequently referred, cannot claim any unlimited validity. A curvature of rays of light can only take place when the velocity of propagation of light varies with position."......Today we find that since the Special Theory of Relativity unfortunately became part of the so called mainstream science, it is considered a sacrilege to even suggest that the speed of light be anything other than a constant. This is somewhat surprising since even Einstein himself suggested in a paper "On the Influence of Gravitation on the Propagation of Light," Annalen der Physik, 35, 1911, that the speed of light might vary with the gravitational potential. Indeed, the variation of the speed of light in a vacuum or space is explicitly shown in Einstein's calculation for the angle at which light should bend upon the influence of gravity. One can find his calculation in his paper. The result is c'=c(1+V/c^2) where V is the gravitational potential relative to the point where the measurement is taken. 1+V/c^2 is also known as the GRAVITATIONAL REDSHIFT FACTOR." Pentcho Valev |
|
#95
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 12, 10:18 pm, Tom Roberts wrote:
Juan R. González-Álvarez wrote: [...] Let me for the moment suspend disbelief and stipulate that everything you said is true and accepted by the entire physics community, and that you and your references have described a complete and self-consistent theory worthy to be the successor to GR as the best theory of gravity. In that context, please answer this one point: My point is that one cannot possibly MEASURE the "gravitational force" on an orbiting satellite. Completely wrong once again. So prove it, by describing precisely how one MEASURES the "gravitational force" on an orbiting satellite. Don't give blank references to unspecified literature, just give a basic description of the method. A one-sentence statement of the basic principle of the measurement will do. And please don't use jargon or undefined notation, but follow the "colloquium test" -- give a description that is understandable to a graduate student or postdoc not expert in the field. Tom Roberts The idea of instanteous transmission is logically flawed to be ABSOLUTELY ridiculous. It enables scenarios like, the Sun appears in front of me, but it could *truly* be behind me, so the Sun could be anywhere else instead of where it appears to be. I suppose next TV Flandern will introduce a probabilistic location for the "true" location of the Sun. That will simplify the art of Celestrial Mechanics to flipping coins. On Apr.8, in this thread, I posted clear simple diagrams, based on Equivalence Principle on how GR permits using the imaged location of the Sun to calculate orbits. That accounts for the fact that if the Earth were to stop and reverse revolutional direction the aberrated image of the Sun would shift in direction too, to it's opposite (asymmetrical) from the Newtonian position, going from +20" to -20". I went on to use the geodesic equation of motion to show how that is accounted for. Regards Ken S. Tucker |
|
#96
|
|||
|
|||
|
Tom Roberts wrote on Sun, 13 Apr 2008 05:18:54 +0000:
In that context, please answer this one point: My point is that one cannot possibly MEASURE the "gravitational force" on an orbiting satellite. It is really ironic now i am revising a published work by a colleague where he proposes an experiment to differentiate between GR and alternative theory of gravity by measuring one specific effect on the gravitational force on orbiting bodies! So prove it, by describing precisely how one MEASURES the "gravitational force" on an orbiting satellite. Recently I waste time in spr trying to explain to a guy measurements of velocities for Dirac electrons, when he did not even understood that was being measured. I do not usually repeat the same mistakes. To avoid wasting time now, it would be good to define first the expression for the gravitational force that astronomers working in celestial mechanics measure for an orbiting body. You claimed that one cannot possibly measure the gravitational force. Before discussing your claim, it may be a good thing if you write first the expression for the gravitational force for an orbiting body (e.g. Mercury planet). By simplicity use, for instance, Schwarzild coordinates. -- http://canonicalscience.org/en/misce...guidelines.txt |
|
#97
|
|||
|
|||
|
Juan R. González-Ãlvarez wrote:
It is really ironic now i am revising a published work by a colleague where he proposes an experiment to differentiate between GR and alternative theory of gravity by measuring one specific effect on the gravitational force on orbiting bodies! Especially "ironic" is the fact that you cannot meet my challenge to describe how to measure it. Actually, the irony is that you do not understand WHY this challenge cannot be met, and yet you think you are an "expert". Tom Roberts wrote: So prove [your claim that I am "completely wrong"], by describing precisely how one MEASURES the "gravitational force" on an orbiting satellite. [...complete failure to do so] If you were actually familiar with this subject and able to meet my challenge, it would be MUCH EASIER to simply describe how to measure "gravitational force" on an orbiting satellite, than doing all the evasion and obfuscation you write to avoid facing the fact that you cannot meet my challenge. To avoid wasting time now, it would be good to define first the expression for the gravitational force that astronomers working in celestial mechanics measure for an orbiting body. More evasion -- YOU are the one "wasting time". My challenge is clear and concise. Why is it that you cannot meet the challenge? Even though you claim to be an expert (and are "revising" a colleague's work). (of course _I_ know why you cannot do it, I'm trying to get YOU to understand why this challenge cannot be met) You claimed that one cannot possibly measure the gravitational force. Before discussing your claim, it may be a good thing if you write first the expression for the gravitational force for an orbiting body (e.g. Mercury planet). Still more evasion -- Don't evade the challenge, use whatever expression you wish. Use whatever definition of "gravitational force" you wish. But be sure to meet the challenge: describe how to MEASURE the "gravitational FORCE" on an orbiting satellite, not any indirect or model-dependent implications of it (such as orbit parameters, which are geometrical, not any sort of force). From the nature of this challenge I would expect the answer to be an English description of an experimental technique, and not need any equations at all. But however you phrase your response is up to you. EXAMPLE: when one whirls a stone on a string around one's head, it is easy to measure the centripetal force on the stone -- it is tension and one can simply put a spring scale between stone and string. But it simply is not possible to measure the "centrifugal force" -- there is no place to put the scale. HINT: there is a deep relationship between this inability and the inability to measure "gravitational force". HINT2: both "centrifugal force" and "gravitational force" are coordinate dependent (this is true in both GR and Newtonian mechanics). Tom Roberts |
|
#98
|
|||
|
|||
|
Juan R. González-Ãlvarez wrote:
Necessity of simultaneous co-existence of instantaneous and retarded interactions in classical electrodynamics. 1999: Int. J. of Mod. Phys. A 14(24), 3789. Chubykalo, Andrew E; Vlaev, Stoyan J. I have now read this paper. Apparently you have not (at least not with a critical eye that does not accept claims that are not established mathematically). I suggest you do so before making additional false claims about its implications. In all papers, the conclusions are that electromagnetic interactions are not retarded by c. This is just plain wrong -- the above-referenced paper does not say this at all. it is proven that speed of electromagnetism cannot be "c". This, too, is not established in the above-referenced paper. Mistakes of relativist literature are noticed and corrected. This, too, is not established in the above-referenced paper. Yes, that paper has "instantaneous interactions" in its title, but it does not establish them at all. This is quite easy to see: if there were "instantaneous interactions", then to compute the field at (x,y,z,t) they would need to evaluate the Lienard-Wiechert potentials [their eq. 2] at time t, rather than at the retarded time t0. Nowhere in the paper is this done. Nowhere does the paper present any alternate formulation, only L-W potentials are used, with ALL SOURCE QUANTITIES EVALUATED AT THE RETARDED TIME t0. So there is no "instantaneous interaction" anywhere in the paper, except the title. AT MOST what they have established is that the conventional notation is inadequate to express the subtleties of differentiating a retarded-time function of the source trajectory with respect to the implicitly-defined retarded time, and relating it to the coordinate time of the point at which the fields are to be evaluated. But given the comment by J.D. Jackson (yes, THAT Jackson, author of _Classical_Electrodynamics_), I'm not convinced they even did that. It is not terribly surprising that the notation is strained -- in other fields of physics it is well established that the usual partial and total derivatives are inadequate [#]. Hydrodynamics comes to mind, where there the operator d/dt+v.Del is neither "partial" nor "total" (it is a co- moving derivative). Thermodynamics, too, needs careful notation for its "partial" derivatives. [#] Not to mention various geometrical derivatives such as covariant and Lie derivatives. In any case, this is just a tempest in a teapot: only a theoretical physicist or a mathematician would ever differentiate their [eq. 2] with respect to the retarded time t0 and relate it to the coordinate time t, and then do it again to verify Maxwell's equations -- nobody else would have the fortitude to wade through the many pages of algebra involved (of which this paper is merely a summary). This paper is probably a useful and important lesson for such people. In the real world, experimental physicists and engineers use computer programs to solve problems in electrodynamics. Those programs take an ALGORITHMIC approach to solving the L-W potentials of [eq. 2], and they do PRECISELY what it says. That is, they first establish a mesh in {x,y,z,t} (or equivalent coordinates); to evaluate the potential at each point in the mesh they solve the retardation equation [eq. 8] numerically, and then evaluate [eq. 2] at the retarded time. Differentiating the potential on the mesh at any point involves only nearest neighbors, so there is no doubt that there is no "instantaneous action-at-a-distance" involved. Yes, some programs make other approximations, and use algorithms that avoid the differentiation on the mesh, but all are equivalent to what I described, except for purely numerical issues. Once the fields on the mesh are available, it is again a simple differentiation (involving only nearest neighbors) to verify that Maxwell's equations are satisfied -- this is routinely done when testing these programs, and again it is clear that no "instantaneous action-at-a-distance" is involved. Zillions of successful products and equipment have been designed using such programs -- so this approach is validated IN THE REAL WORLD. I wanted to title this note "Outrageous Claims are Flat-Out WRONG", but scholarly restraint prevented it. Unfortunately, Chubykalo and Vlaev felt no such restraint: they DID make an outrageous claim, and it IS flat-out wrong. When i first meet that paper i said myself "That may be wrong". Then i tried hard to find the mistake and i did not. Try again: Look for a place where they evaluate [eq. 2] at time t rather than the retarded time t0. THAT is what an "instantaneous interaction" would involve, not their subtleties about differentiating with respect to implicitly-defined variables (which may well be valid). The fact that non-retarded derivatives with respect to {x,y,z,t} appear is due to the way fields are LOCALLY related to potentials, and due to the fact that Maxwell's equations are purely LOCAL. This is not any sort of "instantaneous interaction", because the source trajectory is ALWAYS evaluated at the retarded time. Tom Roberts |
|
#99
|
|||
|
|||
|
Tom Roberts wrote on Mon, 14 Apr 2008 14:30:05 +0000:
You claimed that one cannot possibly measure the gravitational force. Before discussing your claim, it may be a good thing if you write first the expression for the gravitational force for an orbiting body (e.g. Mercury planet). Still more evasion -- Don't evade the challenge, use whatever expression you wish. Use whatever definition of "gravitational force" you wish. But be sure to meet the challenge: describe how to MEASURE the "gravitational FORCE" on an orbiting satellite, not any indirect or model-dependent implications of it (such as orbit parameters, which are geometrical, not any sort of force). Excuses excuses excuses... I am still waiting from you to write the force, just that you say cannot be measured Tom. Or maybe as usual you are writting about stuff you never studied Tom. from guidelines: {DO NOT ARGUE AGAINST PROUD NON-SPECIALISTS Some people strongly argue over a topic they did not even take the time to study. Some of this people even reject to read the references you provide to support your point! When you correct some of their mistakes, they often reply by making more mistakes. Avoid this trap also! It fills the network with useless noise in some exponential way. } no place to put the scale. HINT: there is a deep relationship between this inability and the inability to measure "gravitational force". HINT2: both "centrifugal force" and "gravitational force" are coordinate dependent (this is true in both GR and Newtonian mechanics). I waited just that kind of mistaken argument from you Tom and that is because ironically i cited certain paper i am now studying. That paper shows how the equation for the orbit (in terms of gravitational force, which is computed) in the alternative theory is *independent* of the system of coordinates (whereas you are at least correct here) the corresponding equation for GR is coordinate dependant. Game over. -- http://canonicalscience.org/en/misce...guidelines.txt |
|
#100
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Juan R." González-Ãlvarez wrote on Mon, 14 Apr 2008 19:50:57 +0200:
That paper shows how the equation for the orbit (in terms of gravitational force, which is computed) in the alternative theory is *independent* of the system of coordinates (whereas you are at least correct here) the corresponding equation for GR is coordinate dependant. May be That paper shows how the equation for the orbit (in terms of gravitational force, which is computed) in the alternative theory is *independent* of the system of coordinates chosen, whereas (you are at least correct here) the corresponding equation for GR is coordinate dependant. This is the reason which one can speak about *gravitational force* on that alternative approach. -- http://canonicalscience.org/en/misce...guidelines.txt |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Gravity Waves and the Speed of Gravity | Sancho's Atomic Trousers | Physics - General Discussion | 12 | October 17th 07 06:08 AM |
| Gravity Waves and the Speed of Gravity | Sancho's Atomic Trousers | The Theory of Relativity | 6 | October 17th 07 06:08 AM |
| Quantum Gravity 167.1: Solution To Quantum Gravity Via Unlimited Light Speed | OsherD | Physics - General Discussion | 0 | July 22nd 07 05:20 PM |
| Quantum Gravity 141.0: Causation vs Light Speed vs Sound Speed | OsherD | Physics - General Discussion | 0 | May 18th 07 08:07 AM |
| The speed of light revisited | Spaceman | Physics - General Discussion | 283 | February 22nd 06 10:29 AM |