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#251
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Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sat, 31 May 2008 11:58:18 -0700:
On May 31, 10:44 am, "Juan R." González-Álvarez wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sat, 31 May 2008 10:26:58 -0700: On May 31, 9:58 am, "Juan R." González-Álvarez wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sat, 31 May 2008 09:19:15 -0700: Hi Juan, a quick question below... On May 31, 6:13 am, "Juan R." González-Álvarez wrote: carlip-nospam wrote on Sat, 31 May 2008 01:17:57 +0000: ... Your computation of 'gradients' were corrected in several cited references. This statement demonstrates clearly that you don't understand basic general relativity. The geodesics of the metric *are* the paths of the target bodies. Once you know the path -- the position as a function of time -- you can use any coordinate system you like, and any definition of acceleration you like. The answer is uniquely determined. In the field formulation? Sure. In the geometrical (geodesic) one? Sure it is not because the path is coordinate dependent. That is one of main reasons that one can speak about a gravitational force in the field formulation. The force is uniquely determined as orbits of test bodies are also. Where U^i is contravariant 3-velocity, then the geodesic is defined in GR by an "absolute derivative" like, DU^i/ds =0, and that is the equation of motion in GR. Juan, do you understand that equation? Regards I wonder by your insistence on posting about stuff you ignore. Of course, the equation of motion in the geometrical theory of gravity is geodesic *But* i wrote (\blockquote That is one of main reasons that one can speak about a gravitational force in the *field* formulation. ) I can write the geodesic equation of motion in different ways. I like the expression (in concise notation) a = - Gamma v v and i can write it in other ways (ways you do not know :-)) Your query is really funny when one notices i have been writing geodesic equations both here and in spf. But could you write the *field* theoretic equation of motion? No! Well that is not a surprise :-) -- Center for CANONICAL |SCIENCE) http://canonicalscience.org Ok fine, you Juan, TVF and Eugene appear to be unable to grasp the GPoR emobodied within, DU^i/ds =0, succinctly. If you guy's can understand that, then tell us how to revise that simple equation. In Eq.(6) at this cite, http://physics.trak4.com/modern-spacetime.pdfabsolute motion vanishes, in accord with International Standards. You see, a good fella like myself, can easily define the "state of the art", where GToR is concerned, and all you need to do is show me where I'm mistaken, go and do it. Regards Ken S. Tucker PS: Stop wasting my time. Ok, a) you cannot write the field theoretic equation, b) you cannot understand how the geodesic equation of motion follows from the field theoretic one in the geometric limit and c) you cannot understand that extension of SR and GR means :-) P.S: Your geometric "modern-spacetime.pdf" is useless but you already were said that in spf, true? Juan, from the standpoint of objective science, I've attempted to extend to you TVF and Eugene, the benefit of doubt, and I can argue, on your behalf for you, given any plausible argument. The MST "modern-spacetime.pdf" is the best we have so far, improvements are welcome sir. But, at least I can provide good theoretics in 2 pages, posted! You boys (Juan, TVF and Eugene) need 200 pages to make your point, what ever the **** it is, I've still haven't figured out what your trying to do except being infactuated with Minkowski's Group(oo), well I know everything about that Group, so what. Maybe I should advise you guys on G(oo)! I agree that one can write a 2 pages 'article' (and even one with zero pages) iff one decides to ignore all the fundamental questions and just repeat the *mistakes* were already corrected in print (e.g. in the cited articles in Physical Review and other top journals). P.S: Ken, your misunderstanding about groups was addressed three or four times before. -- Center for CANONICAL |SCIENCE) http://canonicalscience.org |
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#252
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On Jun 1, 12:47 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
On May 31, 11:58 am, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote: You boys (Juan, TVF and Eugene) need 200 pages to make your point, what ever the **** it is, Well, after several thousands of posts, you still dont have a point. shrug LOL, I'll buy a pencil sharpener. Ken |
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#253
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On Jun 1, 6:38 am, "Juan R." Gonzlez-lvarez
wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sat, 31 May 2008 11:58:18 -0700: ... Juan, from the standpoint of objective science, I've attempted to extend to you TVF and Eugene, the benefit of doubt, and I can argue, on your behalf for you, given any plausible argument. The MST "modern-spacetime.pdf" is the best we have so far, improvements are welcome sir. But, at least I can provide good theoretics in 2 pages, posted! You boys (Juan, TVF and Eugene) need 200 pages to make your point, what ever the **** it is, I've still haven't figured out what your trying to do except being infactuated with Minkowski's Group(oo), well I know everything about that Group, so what. Maybe I should advise you guys on G(oo)! I agree that one can write a 2 pages 'article' (and even one with zero pages) iff one decides to ignore all the fundamental questions and just repeat the *mistakes* were already corrected in print (e.g. in the cited articles in Physical Review and other top journals). I usually don't cite Physical Review as it is not available online. P.S: Ken, your misunderstanding about groups was addressed three or four times before. I'm afraid the Group(oo) is implausible and without any physical empiricism so far. However as a mathematical tool, it does have advantages in some simplistic problems, which is 99.9% of physics. It's when you (Juan and gang) sell your ideas as a *new truth* when in fact it's currently a simplification of very old ideas. Cheers Ken |
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Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sun, 01 Jun 2008 08:43:04 -0700:
On Jun 1, 6:38 am, "Juan R." González-Álvarez wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sat, 31 May 2008 11:58:18 -0700: ... Juan, from the standpoint of objective science, I've attempted to extend to you TVF and Eugene, the benefit of doubt, and I can argue, on your behalf for you, given any plausible argument. The MST "modern-spacetime.pdf" is the best we have so far, improvements are welcome sir. But, at least I can provide good theoretics in 2 pages, posted! You boys (Juan, TVF and Eugene) need 200 pages to make your point, what ever the **** it is, I've still haven't figured out what your trying to do except being infactuated with Minkowski's Group(oo), well I know everything about that Group, so what. Maybe I should advise you guys on G(oo)! I agree that one can write a 2 pages 'article' (and even one with zero pages) iff one decides to ignore all the fundamental questions and just repeat the *mistakes* were already corrected in print (e.g. in the cited articles in Physical Review and other top journals). I usually don't cite Physical Review as it is not available online. Now understand :-) P.S: Ken, your misunderstanding about groups was addressed three or four times before. I'm afraid the Group(oo) is implausible and without any physical empiricism so far. However as a mathematical tool, it does have advantages in some simplistic problems, which is 99.9% of physics. It's when you (Juan and gang) sell your ideas as a *new truth* when in fact it's currently a simplification of very old ideas. You got all wrong again Ken, "extension" is the contrary of "simplification" :-) -- Center for CANONICAL |SCIENCE) http://canonicalscience.org |
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On Jun 2, 3:50 am, "Juan R." Gonzlez-lvarez
wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sun, 01 Jun 2008 08:43:04 -0700: On Jun 1, 6:38 am, "Juan R." Gonzlez-lvarez wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sat, 31 May 2008 11:58:18 -0700: ... Juan, from the standpoint of objective science, I've attempted to extend to you TVF and Eugene, the benefit of doubt, and I can argue, on your behalf for you, given any plausible argument. The MST "modern-spacetime.pdf" is the best we have so far, improvements are welcome sir. But, at least I can provide good theoretics in 2 pages, posted! You boys (Juan, TVF and Eugene) need 200 pages to make your point, what ever the **** it is, I've still haven't figured out what your trying to do except being infactuated with Minkowski's Group(oo), well I know everything about that Group, so what. Maybe I should advise you guys on G(oo)! I agree that one can write a 2 pages 'article' (and even one with zero pages) iff one decides to ignore all the fundamental questions and just repeat the *mistakes* were already corrected in print (e.g. in the cited articles in Physical Review and other top journals). I usually don't cite Physical Review as it is not available online. Now understand :-) P.S: Ken, your misunderstanding about groups was addressed three or four times before. I'm afraid the Group(oo) is implausible and without any physical empiricism so far. However as a mathematical tool, it does have advantages in some simplistic problems, which is 99.9% of physics. It's when you (Juan and gang) sell your ideas as a *new truth* when in fact it's currently a simplification of very old ideas. You got all wrong again Ken, "extension" is the contrary of "simplification" :-) Well you Juan are right, I did make a mistake. I published a book, "Slide Rule OR Abacus, the Truth of the Best". What I can't understand is why it didn't get on the New York Times best seller list. You see the Slide Rule is based on a continuum, while the Abacus is quantized. Obviously, my unification of the Slide Rule and the Abacus quantizes the continuum, but nobody listens to me, they insist on using those new fangalled calculator thing-me-bobs. My next best-seller will be applying a circular slide rule to rotational problems, like a channel changer that clicks 2,3,4...13. Regards Ken |
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#256
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[This replies to Saul and Steve Carlip.]
Saul writes: [Saul]: As I understand the math of GR ... the same physics applies to the Lienard-Weichert potential of E&M. Of course it’s not the same physics. Very different physical entities and properties are involved. But the math of retarded potentials is closely parallel for gravity and electrodynamics. For GR, that math describes the gravitational potential field, which governs small relativistic effects such as light-bending. But the field equations and their solutions tell us nothing about orbital motion until we take spatial partials to form gradients. The force (meaning the time rate of change of 3-space momentum) acting on a target body happens to be equal to the gradient of the potential, and determines the orbital motion. It is only when we use information from the Einstein field equations in conjunction with an assumption about forces (to describe the orbital motion of target bodies in Euclidean 3-space for the purpose of comparing to observations) that any disagreement arises. But that particular usage (unlike other GR effects such as light-bending) requires taking spatial partial derivatives to get a gradient. This process in turn requires making an assumption about “instantaneous” vs. “retarded” gradient because the direction of the gradient is frame-dependent, especially if the propagation speed of changes in the field is as slow as light-speed. [Saul]: Let me try to make a layman's explanation of Carlip's argument... Is the idea that the space-time ahead of the Earth, where the Earth has not yet reached in its orbit, has already been affected by gravitational force of the sun, and therefore the force is in a slightly different direction making our orbit stable? Carlip has changed his argument over the years. At one time, he argued for the existence of a “velocity-dependent force” to cancel the effect of propagation delay (aberration). But in his latest post, he stated: “The force is the gradient of the potential. If the potential doesn't change, its derivatives don't, either.” As you saw in my reply, that’s a wrong statement. The gradient (which is formed from the spatial partial derivatives of the potential) is a vector, and is ever changing its direction as viewed from the frame of a moving target body. And that is where the issue arises here. You describe a version of Carlip’s argument that the source mass does not attract target bodies toward itself now, but toward its own future position. But physically, how can we explain that the force always acts almost exactly in the direction of the true, instantaneous source mass rather than the direction of the light-time retarded source mass, even when the source mass is accelerating? The only explanation that does not use physical miracles (such as the creation of new momentum from nothing) is forces propagating strongly FTL. and Steve Carlip writes: [Carlip]: Now, at time t=0, make the following change in R: stop the motion of M. You apparently agree that this change will have no affect at p until the time for a light signal to reach p from R. [TomVF]: What I agreed to was that the gravitational potential field at p would not change until one light-time later than t = 0. However, it is clear from logic, observation, and computer experiments that the force operating at point p changes almost instantly, [Carlip]: The "force" is the gradient of the potential. If the potential doesn't change, its derivatives don't, either. [TomVF]: Consider a body on a circular orbit. [The] gravitational potential [it experiences] is constant. Yet the gradient of that potential (a vector) is ever-changing. Your claim is wrong. You are apparently unfamiliar with the physics of gradients, having learned only the trivial math. [Carlip]: This is silly. The potential at the location of the object ... is never constant. First, you seemed to think I might have been talking about the potential of the target body, but I was not. So I fixed my statement and your answer to omit remarks about the target body potential, leaving only our remarks about the source mass potential. Obviously, your statement is wrong because the source mass’s potential at a target body moving on a circular orbit *is constant*, contrary to what you say. You do realize potential is a scalar, not a vector, right? [Carlip]: For Newtonian gravity, the derivative of the potential *in the direction of the orbiting object* is zero, which is why there is no tangential force. I wish you would choose your words more carefully. I read this several times, interpreting “in the direction of the orbiting body” as the direction for the source mass to the target body. Then I realized you must have meant to say “in the direction the orbiting body is moving”. But interpreted in that way, your statement is just a verification of my statement, that the source mass’s potential at the target body on a circular orbit is constant. [Carlip]: But at each point in the orbit, the derivative of the potential in the direction perpendicular to the orbit is nonzero. To call such a potential "constant" is a word game. No, you are making careless choices of words. “Perpendicular” should be replaced by “radial”. (For example, “normal” is also perpendicular.) And I’m guessing you meant “gradient” when you said “derivative” in your previous sentence. We are obviously talking about spatial derivatives, and the partial of potential with respect to coordinate x can be zero or non-zero depending on what reference frame – the source mass’s or the target body’s – we are using. I think I was pretty clear in saying that the potential at a target body in a circular orbit is constant, even though its gradient is not. No one reading this is uneducated enough to think the potential in the radial direction is constant. So who is playing word games? Fixing all these poorly worded statements in the way I just described (a risky thing to do, I admit, because this assumes I know what you were trying to say), I think your main point is that the potential field as a whole is unchanging as long as the source mass is unchanging, and that therefore gradients of that potential field everywhere are likewise unchanging. That much is trivially true, but ignores the case that matters. The gradient of that same potential field as seen and experienced by a moving target body is ever varying in direction, and therefore has instantaneous and retarded directions that differ. Is there any chance we have straightened out terminology problems and agree up to this point? [Carlip]: Note that when the orbiting object is at a position (x,y,z), the force is determined by the gradient of the potential at (x,y,z), at the time the object is at that location. What you say is certainly true for a non-moving target body. But why would the gradient of the potential in the source mass’s frame be more important to a moving target body than the gradient of the same potential as seen and experienced by the moving target body? [Carlip]: That's what the gradient is. Only in the source mass’s frame of reference. [Carlip]: Please tell me what the "retarded gradient" is. The same mathematical function calculated in the frame of the moving target body, assuming the gradient must always be toward the source mass. Because the source mass direction varies as seen from the target body, so goes the field gradient direction vary from moment to moment. The spatial partials change with time. [Carlip]: For example, here's a function: F(x,y,z,t) = 1/sqrt{ (x-at)^2 + (y-bt)^2 + (z-ct)^2} I know how to compute its gradient at any position and time. Please write down its "retarded gradient." You have mentioned only one coordinate system. The question itself betrays that you don’t understand retarded gradients. Now if we imitated the case of a target body on a circular orbit, then we would introduce the target’s body’s frame wherein the source mass has coordinates (X,Y,Z,t), and X = r sin nt, Y = r cos nt, Z = 0, r^2 = x^2 + y^2 + z^2, n = angular velocity of source mass around target body. Then when we do a coordinate transformation from (x,y,z,t) to (X,Y,Z,t), your function F becomes a function of time, and so does any derivative of F taken in the (X,Y,Z) frame. [TomVF]: *After* you determine the geodesics in that metric, you must still compute a gradient (or take the equivalent spatial partials) to get the 3-space force/acceleration. [Carlip]: This statement demonstrates clearly that you don't understand basic general relativity. The geodesics of the metric *are* the paths of the target bodies. Once you know the path -- the position as a function of time -- you can use any coordinate system you like, and any definition of acceleration you like. The answer is uniquely determined. Maybe all our issues are terminology. The (time-like) geodesic equations are not the path, but merely allow the path to be determined by taking partials to form a gradient and *assuming* that this gradient represents a force. Otherwise, the target body would remain in its initial state relative to the source mass, as it must if no force acts on it. 3-space dynamics are not present in the geodesic equations. Let me use an example, because we keep arguing about the strict meaning of words. The (time-like) geodesic equations describe the potential field everywhere. That is analogous to describing the shape of a hill. Knowing the shape of a hill, we can determine the speed and direction of a ball placed on it at any later time. But that is only because we know about the force acting on the ball. A hill with no force acting cannot initiate any motion in a ball. So a geodesic equation without some further assumption about force (such as “gradient of the potential) likewise cannot initiate 3-space motion. That is why a lot of work goes into deriving 3-space equations of orbital acceleration from geodesic equations, and why the starting point is some assumption about dynamics such as “force is the gradient of potential”. [Carlip]: The geodesic *is* the path. It's (x(t),y(t),z(t)). Once you give an initial position and velocity, this path is completely and uniquely determined by the geodesic equation. No further assumptions are needed. Are you talking about trivial cases such as space-like geodesics or null geodesics here? Are you talking about a spacetime path instead of a 3-space path? Those cases are irrelevant to orbital motion, our topic here. So please look at the geodesic equations at http://metaresearch.org/cosmology/gravity/spacetime.asp and tell me how to compute a simple circular orbit from those equations without making some assumption about force. Geodesic equations per se contain no 3-space dynamics. They merely tell us how proper time differs from coordinate time along any path. We must add an assumption about force before we can derive 3-space (Euclidean) acceleration from geodesic equations. I’m guessing you must have never understood what the Einstein-Infeld-Hoffmann or Robertson-Noonan or Damour-Deruelle papers, deriving 3-space equations of motion, are all about. Why do those papers exist if the geodesic equations contain all the information we need about orbits? [Carlip]: You claim that there is a mathematical operation called "retarded gradient." Define it! Given a field, as a function of position and time in a given coordinate system, tell me the mathematical procedure for computing its "retarded gradient." For a moving target body, the instantaneous gradient points toward the instantaneous direction of the source mass, and the retarded gradient points toward the retarded direction of the source mass. Surely you don’t need me to write the corresponding ASCII equations for you to grasp such a simple physics concept. [TomVF]: But then, my paper with Vigier in Foundations of Physics is now six years old, and already back then showed the definition of gradient and how to apply it to the case of a dynamic target body. [Carlip]: I have looked at that paper, but apparently missed the definition. Please give me the equation number for the equation in that paper that defines the "retarded gradient" of a function. The first equation in section 3 gives the mathematical definition of a gradient for a single coordinate system. We then go on to explain why physics has an issue that math does not, with these words: “Note that the gradient of a scalar field is a vector, not another scalar. But if the field source begins to move, does the field gradient point toward the instantaneous or retarded position of the source? That depends on whether the field updates or regenerates instantly or with delay. So when we say that the gravitational acceleration of a test body follows the field gradient, we must ask which gradient it will follow -- instantaneous or retarded. Physics has an issue that math does not. Retarded potentials in math allow for delays only in the mass distribution and in changes of distance between masses in a scalar field. Retarded potentials in physics must allow also for delays in the vector direction of the field – normally the dominant effect of retardation.” Why is it that whenever we switch from talking math (equations) to talking physics (concepts, properties, principles), we seem to have so much difficulty communicating? -|Tom|- Tom Van Flandern – Sequim, WA - see our web site on frontier astronomy research at http://metaresearch.org |
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On Jun 3, 3:49 am, "Juan R." Gonzlez-lvarez
wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote on Mon, 02 Jun 2008 11:51:59 -0700: On Jun 2, 3:50 am, "Juan R." Gonzlez-lvarez wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sun, 01 Jun 2008 08:43:04 -0700: On Jun 1, 6:38 am, "Juan R." Gonzlez-lvarez wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote on Sat, 31 May 2008 11:58:18 -0700: ... Juan, from the standpoint of objective science, I've attempted to extend to you TVF and Eugene, the benefit of doubt, and I can argue, on your behalf for you, given any plausible argument. The MST "modern-spacetime.pdf" is the best we have so far, improvements are welcome sir. But, at least I can provide good theoretics in 2 pages, posted! You boys (Juan, TVF and Eugene) need 200 pages to make your point, what ever the **** it is, I've still haven't figured out what your trying to do except being infactuated with Minkowski's Group(oo), well I know everything about that Group, so what. Maybe I should advise you guys on G(oo)! I agree that one can write a 2 pages 'article' (and even one with zero pages) iff one decides to ignore all the fundamental questions and just repeat the *mistakes* were already corrected in print (e.g. in the cited articles in Physical Review and other top journals). I usually don't cite Physical Review as it is not available online. Now understand :-) P.S: Ken, your misunderstanding about groups was addressed three or four times before. I'm afraid the Group(oo) is implausible and without any physical empiricism so far. However as a mathematical tool, it does have advantages in some simplistic problems, which is 99.9% of physics. It's when you (Juan and gang) sell your ideas as a *new truth* when in fact it's currently a simplification of very old ideas. You got all wrong again Ken, "extension" is the contrary of "simplification" :-) Well you Juan are right, I did make a mistake. Everybody makes mistakes Ken. The problem is when you misread others, make false accusations about the work of others (work you do *not* know) and *repeat* the accusations even after being kindly pointed about the mistake. As i already pointed here several times, I am working in an *extension* of both SR and GR. The theories of SR and GR are recovered in a well- defined limit of a more general and sophisticated theory. The theory reduces to GR and explains *why* the speed of gravity in GR coincides with the speed of gravity. However this is not true in the generalized theory. The new theory is a sophisticated formulation based in mathematics and physics developed in last few years. Technically it is a nongeometrical DPI many-body theory in Liouville space with universal evolution parameter. As already said GR results are obtained as special case and the limits of geometry and spacetime fixed :-) Your accusation of using 1908 physics and maths looks thus completely irrelevant and your re-accusations look very unfair :-) Ok, who is your target market, (evidentally not me, as you Juan insist). I'm interested in the new predicticts your theory makes, apart from our classicals. Ken |
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#258
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[I ignore the embroidery and only discuss Van Flandern's primary confusion.]
Tom Van Flandern wrote: We then go on to explain why physics has an issue that math does not, with these words: “Note that the gradient of a scalar field is a vector, not another scalar. But if the field source begins to move, does the field gradient point toward the instantaneous or retarded position of the source? That depends on whether the field updates or regenerates instantly or with delay. So when we say that the gravitational acceleration of a test body follows the field gradient, we must ask which gradient it will follow -- instantaneous or retarded. Physics has an issue that math does not. Retarded potentials in math allow for delays only in the mass distribution and in changes of distance between masses in a scalar field. Retarded potentials in physics must allow also for delays in the vector direction of the field – normally the dominant effect of retardation.” Why is it that whenever we switch from talking math (equations) to talking physics (concepts, properties, principles), we seem to have so much difficulty communicating? -|Tom|- [For simplicity, I'll discuss the Lenard-Wiechert potential of classical electrodynamics (ignoring magnetism). I'll relate this to GR below.] "We" don't have "so much difficulty", only YOU do, probably because your description above is just plain wrong. Your question "does the field gradient point toward the instantaneous or retarded position of the source?" is SUPERFLUOUS AND MAKES AN INVALID ASSUMPTION -- the math is unambiguous, and the answer is: NEITHER, the field gradient points to the retarded source position EXTRAPOLATED LINEARLY to the time at which the gradient is evaluated. The correct way to use the L-W potential for a single point source, and to compute the E field from its gradient, is as follows: To determine the E field at spatial point P and time T (both specified in a given inertial frame which is used throughout) one needs to know the potential at every point within a spatial neighborhood of P at time T. One does that using the L-W formula, noting that the retardation is different for each point in the neighborhood of P, so that the source position is evaluated at slightly different times for each point in the neighborhood (one can relate this difference to the velocity of the source at the retarded time). Now one takes the gradient of the potential at P. Note there is no ambiguity whatsoever in taking that gradient, because the potential was evaluated at time T for every point within the spatial neighborhood of P. Let me repeat that: there is no ambiguity whatsoever in taking the gradient at point P and time T, because the potential was evaluated at time T for every point within the spatial neighborhood of P. In particular, properties of the source are evaluated only in an infinitesimal neighborhood of the retarded time T-R(T)/c. [The spatial neighborhood of P is 3-dimensional; the neighborhood of the retarded time is 1-d; for each point in the latter there is a 2-d locus in the former.] When one does this, one finds that for a moving source (i.e. moving relative to the inertial frame used above), E does not point at the location of the source at the retarded time. When one linearly extrapolates the position and velocity of the source at the retarded time in the obvious way to time T, one finds that E points at this latter point. I'm saying nothing new, and this is explained in every graduate-level textbook on classical E&M. In the weak-field linear approximation to GR the situation is more complicated, but basically the same. The gravitational force vector at point P and time T points to the QUADRATICALLY EXTRAPOLATED position of the source at time T. That is, the position, velocity, and acceleration of the source are involved in an infinitesimal neighborhood of the retarded time. In GR itself, without approximation, there is no general Green's-function method to solve the field equation, because it is nonlinear. There can be no scalar "gravitational potential" because in GR gravitation has more degrees of freedom and a scalar field is inadequate to represent it. In some sense the metric can be considered to be a "generalized gravitational potential", and the analogy to the gradient is the Christoffel symbols -- this has the necessary property that the "generalized gravitational force" is zero when evaluated in locally-inertial coordinates. This has been explained to you numerous times. I don't know why it is so hard for you to understand this. Apparently you don't actually have the requisite background: this E&M is very basic physics taught to every graduate student of physics (ditto for the GR, but not every graduate student takes that course). [Your problem seems to be that you cannot imagine that the gradient does not point at the source. It doesn't -- this is NOT a central force, and your notion that retardation screws up planetary orbits is just plain wrong. Indeed, the quadratic extrapolation is PRECISELY what is needed to make such orbits almost but not quite stable (e.g. the precession of perihelia).] Tom Roberts |
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Ken S. Tucker wrote on Wed, 04 Jun 2008 13:20:16 -0700:
On Jun 3, 3:49 am, "Juan R." González-Álvarez As i already pointed here several times, I am working in an *extension* of both SR and GR. The theories of SR and GR are recovered in a well- defined limit of a more general and sophisticated theory. The theory reduces to GR and explains *why* the speed of gravity in GR coincides with the speed of gravity. However this is not true in the generalized theory. The new theory is a sophisticated formulation based in mathematics and physics developed in last few years. Technically it is a nongeometrical DPI many-body theory in Liouville space with universal evolution parameter. As already said GR results are obtained as special case and the limits of geometry and spacetime fixed :-) Your accusation of using 1908 physics and maths looks thus completely irrelevant and your re-accusations look very unfair :-) Ok, who is your target market, (evidentally not me, as you Juan insist). Simple, people who do not make unfair criticisms about works he never read first :-) Also, people who take five minutes to read references provided instead repeating mistakes were corrected in print :-) I'm interested in the new predicticts your theory makes, apart from our classicals. Ken Oh, i am too :-) The dual theory make several interesting predictions (for both electrodynamics and gravity) and also solves well-known difficulties with the former theory (when interactions travel at c). That is, the new theory gives right answers for questions that former theory gives us wrong. If you had taken a look to references cited you would already know at least this part :-) -- Center for CANONICAL |SCIENCE) http://canonicalscience.org |
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#260
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Tom Roberts wrote on Thu, 05 Jun 2008 04:40:03 -0500:
(snipped ad hominem) Tom Van Flandern wrote: [For simplicity, I'll discuss the Lenard-Wiechert potential of classical electrodynamics (ignoring magnetism). I'll relate this to GR below.] (sniped naive discussion) Let me repeat that: there is no ambiguity whatsoever in taking the gradient at point P and time T, because the potential was evaluated at time T for every point within the spatial neighborhood of P. In particular, properties of the source are evaluated only in an infinitesimal neighborhood of the retarded time T-R(T)/c. There exists difficulties to evaluate the E field derived from L&W potentials. This is revised with mathematical detail (just details you ignore) in 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. with the conclusion that fields E and B are *not* retarded but contain an irreducible component with (speed c). That instantaneous component correspond to the dual potential introduced in Action at a distance as a full-value solution of Maxwell equations: The basis and application of the separated-potentials method. 1996: Phys. Rev. E 53, 5373. Chubykalo, Andrew E; Smirnov-Rueda, Roman. Other mathematical ambiguities *you* completely ignore in your naive (textbook like) discussion are revised in other papers, e.g see http://arxiv.org/pdf/math-ph/0204043.pdf and references cited therein. In the weak-field linear approximation to GR the situation is more complicated, but basically the same. Indeed same difficulties than in EM and basically the same dual generalization is needed h^ab(r,t) -- h^ab(r,t) + h^ab(R(t)) I introduce gravitational dualism in my paper "Newtonian limit difficulties of General Relativity". The dual generalization implies that fundamental speed of gravity is not c as incorrectly believed in GR :-) In GR itself, without approximation, there is no general Green's-function method to solve the field equation, because it is nonlinear. And you claim expertise? :-) Next is the standard solution to the field equation in *full* (nonlinear) GR obtained using *Green methods* h^ab = 4 Int (\tau / r) d^3x where the source, of course, is evaluated using the past light cone. (snipped ad hominem) Well, I know *for sure* that Vigier was aware that a pure scalar theory of gravity is not enough. Vigier itself was working a non-scalar theory, and i think Tvf knows that also. But saying that cannot be scalar "gravitational potential" is completely false. The scalar is usually identified with h_00. Take a look to Moller textbook or to Weinberg section in PPN formalism or just ask some astronomer (e.g. TvF) on how they have tested GR using potentials :-) In some sense the metric can be considered to be a "generalized gravitational potential", and the analogy to the gradient is the Christoffel symbols -- this has the necessary property that the "generalized gravitational force" is zero when evaluated in locally-inertial coordinates. Here i would recover a classic from sci.physics.research: "Yours is a statement of profound ignorance in all of its parts." --- Uncle Al to Tom Roberts in sci.physics.research Feb 2008 Once more again, Tom, *you* confound the field formulation with the geometrical formulation. Astronomers are not so ignorant and unlike you they know they are speaking. This is standard stuff and may be found in many textbooks. A resume is: (G) -- Geometric formulation (F) -- field " Metric (G): g_ab = n_ab + h_ab Field potential (F): h_ab Analogy to the gradient (F): (1/2) \gamma (\partial h_ab \over \partial x^k) v^a v^b If either often astronomers simply this expression for weak fields and introduce a set of potentials \phi, A^i, etc. (rest of rants snipped) -- Center for CANONICAL |SCIENCE) http://canonicalscience.org |
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