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| Tags: impossibility, yep |
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#201
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Dear Eric Baird:
On May 8, 11:14*am, Eric Baird wrote: On Sat, 3 May 2008 19:45:48 -0700, "N:dlzcD:aol T:com \(dlzc\)" wrote: Dear VTNAME: "VTNAME" wrote in message ... Hi, I have a bad feeling about the LHC experiment. Anyone else feeling the same thing? Any possibility of the world being blown out by a blackhole created in a lab expt?? We can "Chicken Little" about anything. If GR is right, then the black holes, if produced, must evaporate in microseconds. Typo? I think you probably meant to say, : If QM is right, then the black holes, if produced, ^^^ : must evaporate in microseconds. No, GR is correct. GR predicts black holes(, even Newton predicts black holes... just more massive ones). QM does not (yet) do gravitation. But the collider may provide some "terrain" between the discrete (QM) and the continuous (GR)... then we'll see. Or maybe not... David A. Smith |
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#202
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On Fri, 9 May 2008 06:14:17 +1200, Eric Baird wrote
(in article ): On Sat, 3 May 2008 19:45:48 -0700, "N:dlzc D:aol T:com \(dlzc\)" wrote: Dear VTNAME: "VTNAME" wrote in message ... Hi, I have a bad feeling about the LHC experiment. Anyone else feeling the same thing? Any possibility of the world being blown out by a blackhole created in a lab expt?? We can "Chicken Little" about anything. If GR is right, then the black holes, if produced, must evaporate in microseconds. Typo? I think you probably meant to say, If QM is right, then the black holes, if produced, must evaporate ^^^ in microseconds. Have a Nice Day, =Erk= (Eric Baird) www.relativitybook.com It is Hawkin's theory that predicts the decay of black holes by hawkin radiation. His theory is a modification to GR using a QM approach. ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
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#203
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Dear Cosmik de Bris:
"Cosmik de Bris" wrote in message .com... .... It is Hawkin's theory that predicts the decay of black holes by hawkin radiation. His theory is a modification to GR using a QM approach. 1) It is "Hawking". 2) It is not a modification of GR. GR *assumes* the local laws of physics are the same, regardless of where / when / how-fast. That includes QM as one of those laws. "Synthesis" might be better than "modification", because neither was changed... just better understood. "dual to black holes" evaporated, not in the expected scatter of "watch gears", but a fireball (aka. light). Frankly, I think it might end up being more efficient than either fusion or fission for making energy. I'd just like it if they did not have to use gold, for a change. David A. Smith |
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#204
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On May 5, 7:13*pm, Bob Tian wrote:
On May 1, 9:42*am, Harold Saxon wrote: On 5 Apr, 15:07, "adman" wrote: *Roger Penrose , a man with impressive edcuation, and an impressive career. Shows how impossible it is for the universe, earth and manking to form itself after a big bang explosion. Actually he merely showed how improbable it was, and there is a world of difference between impossible and improbable. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Penrose The calculations of British mathematician Roger Penrose show that the probability of universe conducive to life occurring by chance is in 10 to the10.123. The phrase "extremely unlikely" is inadequate to describe this possibility. Roger Penrose*, a famous British mathematician and a close friend of Stephen Hawking, wondered about this question and tried to calculate the probability. Including what he considered to be all variables required for human beings to exist and live on a planet such as ours, he computed the probability of this environment occurring among all the possible results of the Big Bang. According to Penrose, the odds against such an occurrence were on the order of 1010123 to 1. It is hard even to imagine what this number means. In math, the value 10123 means 1 followed by 123 zeros. (This is, by the way, more than the total number of atoms 1078 believed to exist in the whole universe.) But Penrose's answer is vastly more than this: It requires 1 followed by 10123 zeros. Or consider: 103 means 1,000, a thousand. 10103 is a number that that has 1 followed by 1000 zeros. If there are six zeros, it's called a million; if nine, a billion; if twelve, a trillion and so on. There is not even a name for a number that has 1 followed by 10123 zeros. In practical terms, in mathematics, a probability of 1 in 1050 means "zero probability". That looks to me like a deliberate distortion of an assertion into a fact. Who is supposed to have worked this out? Penrose's number is more than trillion trillion trillion times less than that. In short, Penrose's number tells us that the 'accidental" or "coincidental" creation of our universe is an impossibility. Concerning this mind-boggling number Roger Penrose comments: This now tells how precise the Creator's aim must have been, namely to an accuracy of one part in 1010123. This is an extraordinary figure. One could not possibly even write the number down in full in the ordinary denary notation: it would be 1 followed by 10123 successive 0's. Even if we were to write a 0 on each separate proton and on each separate neutron in the entire universe- and we could throw in all the other particles for good measure- we should fall far short of writing down the figure needed. http://www.faizani.com/news/news_200...ssibility.html If something has happened, no matter how improbable the odds were, there is no point going around claiming it is impossible.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The probability of this universe forming by chance is 1 in 10^10^123. Ok, let's not argue with that. Let's say we hold a billion people random raffle. Ok, so far, but remember you used "we hold". The raffle is drawn and Judy wins. But you point out, the "probability of Judy winning by chance is 1 in 1 billion. There's no way she could've won a random raffle draw. She must have cheated and rigged the draw." See the problem? The odds of ANY person winning is also a billion to one. If anyone else had one, you could've made the same argument and accused anyone of cheating. But the truth is, so long as the raffle was drawn, the probability that somebody will win is 100% guaranteed. Somebody MUST win. Judy, simply lucked out. I agree. This is clear. So let's say that our universe participated in the cosmic raffle. So in this case, how is the raffle setup? In the previous case you said "we hold" a raffle, which is something people can relate to. You are setting ua a straw man already, with a false analogy fallacy on top. So did many other universes. Universe A has more stars than us and twice as many galaxies. Universe B has more pulsars and less planets. Universe C has purple planets with pink rings. etc. The cosmic raffle is drawn. Each of these universes (including ours) has an equal chance of winning (1 in 10^10^123). Even so, when the raffle is drawn, one of these universes MUST win, even if its chances were small. The chance of this is 100% guaranteed. So, as you can see, somebody had to have won. Judy simply lucked out. Somebody had to have won the cosmic raffle as well. Our universe simply lucked out. Both raffles were completely random. It's a logic fallacy to claim that the odds of the resulting winner is small, thus she cheated and rigged/designed the raffle. It's a Texas sharpshooter fallacy. NO, it's the type of false analogy someone who is not in a proper state of mind can come up with. In Judy's case, we know there was a type of raffle that was engineered. In the cosmic analogy case, we know nothing. Prove first there was a raffle and I accept your analogy. Until you prove your analogy is valid, everyone can assume it is a false one especially when it cannot be verified. Because, all it takes is to have the conditions for the type of cosmic raffle you mentioned and given enough time, our univesre and life will emerge. How do the condition for the raffle emerge? Youy get back to the same problem, with another probability for that. Actually, if there was a raffle, the probability of life i9n our universe is: P(life) = P(raffle) x P(universe sustaining life) which is even smaller. Mike - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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#205
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On Sun, 11 May 2008 04:27:33 +1200, N:dlzc D:aol T:com \(dlzc\) wrote
(in article ): Dear Cosmik de Bris: "Cosmik de Bris" wrote in message .com... ... It is Hawkin's theory that predicts the decay of black holes by hawkin radiation. His theory is a modification to GR using a QM approach. 1) It is "Hawking". Yes, I was so careful to remember not to put Hawkings that I left the "g" off as well. ![]() 2) It is not a modification of GR. GR *assumes* the local laws of physics are the same, regardless of where / when / how-fast. That includes QM as one of those laws. "Synthesis" might be better than "modification", because neither was changed... just better understood. Yeah OK, thanks. "dual to black holes" evaporated, not in the expected scatter of "watch gears", but a fireball (aka. light). Frankly, I think it might end up being more efficient than either fusion or fission for making energy. I'd just like it if they did not have to use gold, for a change. Are there any calculations of this energy and its efficiency? ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
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#206
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Dear Cosmik de Bris:
"Cosmik de Bris" wrote in message .com... On Sun, 11 May 2008 04:27:33 +1200, N:dlzc D:aol T:com \(dlzc\) wrote (in article ): .... "dual to black holes" evaporated, not in the expected scatter of "watch gears", but a fireball (aka. light). Frankly, I think it might end up being more efficient than either fusion or fission for making energy. I'd just like it if they did not have to use gold, for a change. Are there any calculations of this energy and its efficiency? Not that I am aware of. Since only a relative handfull of interactions occured, and petajoules involved in achiveing each interaction... they would not make it up in volume. See, I think they only achieved comversion of "non-rest energy" into light... they got the gold nucleii back (in whatever form). Once a classical black hole is formed... the only path out is via quantum tunnelling... and the easiest form for that is as photons. Which could yield some serious energy... maybe not enough to power the collider's operations... but maybe more later. David A. Smith |
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#207
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On Thu, 8 May 2008 11:52:26 -0700 (PDT), dlzc wrote:
Dear Eric Baird: On May 8, 11:14*am, Eric Baird wrote: On Sat, 3 May 2008 19:45:48 -0700, "N:dlzcD:aol T:com \(dlzc\)" wrote: Dear VTNAME: "VTNAME" wrote in message ... Hi, I have a bad feeling about the LHC experiment. Anyone else feeling the same thing? Any possibility of the world being blown out by a blackhole created in a lab expt?? We can "Chicken Little" about anything. If GR is right, then the black holes, if produced, must evaporate in microseconds. Typo? I think you probably meant to say, : If QM is right, then the black holes, if produced, ^^^ : must evaporate in microseconds. No, GR is correct. GR predicts black holes(, even Newton predicts black holes... just more massive ones). QM does not (yet) do gravitation. But the collider may provide some "terrain" between the discrete (QM) and the continuous (GR)... then we'll see. Or maybe not... David A. Smith Oh, okay, sorry David, I misunderstood the point that you were making. I took your sentence to mean something like "If GR is right, black holes will evaporate" (of course, evaporation is a QM thing, not a GR thing, which you obviously know, which is why I thought it was a trivial typo). But ... What you were actually saying was more along the lines of "If GR is right, and even if black holes form ... then thanks to QM and Hawking radiation, they ought to evaporate almost immediately anyway, so they ain't dangerous." I misunderstood the emphasis. Crossed wires. (We now return you to your regular programming ... ) =Erk= (Eric Baird) www.relativitybook.com : " Do you expect me to talk? " : " No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to ... : (tappetty-tappetty tap) : ... DANCE! " : -- "Goldfinger, The Musical" |
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#208
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Dear Eric Baird:
Eric Baird wrote in message ... On Thu, 8 May 2008 11:52:26 -0700 (PDT), dlzc wrote: .... No, GR is correct. GR predicts black holes(, even Newton predicts black holes... just more massive ones). QM does not (yet) do gravitation. But the collider may provide some "terrain" between the discrete (QM) and the continuous (GR)... then we'll see. Or maybe not... Oh, okay, sorry David, I misunderstood the point that you were making. I took your sentence to mean something like "If GR is right, black holes will evaporate" Correct. (of course, evaporation is a QM thing, not a GR thing, which you obviously know, which is why I thought it was a trivial typo). Evaporation is a "the laws of physics are the same for all observers" thing. Upon which GR is founded. But ... What you were actually saying was more along the lines of "If GR is right, and even if black holes form ... then thanks to QM and Hawking radiation, they ought to evaporate almost immediately anyway, so they ain't dangerous." I misunderstood the emphasis. Crossed wires. (We now return you to your regular programming ... ) Hawking radiation combines Unruh radiation and the equivalence principle, both classical observations. The attachment to QM is more subtle than you imagine. David A. Smith |
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#209
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On Sun, 11 May 2008 19:02:20 -0700, "N:dlzc D:aol T:com \(dlzc\)"
wrote: Dear Eric Baird: Eric Baird wrote in message .. . On Thu, 8 May 2008 11:52:26 -0700 (PDT), dlzc wrote: ... No, GR is correct. GR predicts black holes(, even Newton predicts black holes... just more massive ones). QM does not (yet) do gravitation. But the collider may provide some "terrain" between the discrete (QM) and the continuous (GR)... then we'll see. Or maybe not... Oh, okay, sorry David, I misunderstood the point that you were making. I took your sentence to mean something like "If GR is right, black holes will evaporate" Correct. (of course, evaporation is a QM thing, not a GR thing, which you obviously know, which is why I thought it was a trivial typo). Evaporation is a "the laws of physics are the same for all observers" thing. Upon which GR is founded. Yea-ah ... I do understand some of the general arguments for Hawking radiation being a "general" effect. F'rinstance, the way that it appears in acoustics and "olde" emission theory and dragged-aether theories. But the effect isn't expected across gravitational horizons according to Einstein's general theory. That's part of why GR1915's black holes were supposed to be a whole new class of theoretical object .. it was because they showed this novel behaviour (zero outward emissions across a gravitaitonal horizon) that wouldn't have been expected under previous models. Perhaps Hawking radiation might be expected under //someone else's// general theory, but I don't see how the effect can appear classically in a model that's supposed to reduce to the SR equations of motion, as Einstein's was. I'm not averse to the idea of a "more general" general theory that explicitly supports Hawking radiation (in fact, I'm rather keen on it), but AFAIK, nobody's yet managed to get one through peer review. I think that to get such a thing to work, one probably has to switch to an acoustic metric, and have the general theory reduce to that instead of a Minkowski metric ... but changing to an acoustic metric seems to change the basic equations of motion away from special relativity ... and according to the current GR textbooks, any gravitational theory //has// to reduce perfectly to the physics of SR over small regions of spacetime if it's to be classed as credible. So our current methods for assessing curved-spacetime models seem to rule out any solutions that might be able to support Hawking radiation effects classically. The "quantum gravity" guys are making some progress, but I think that's partly because they aren't so explicitly bound by the same textbook conventions as the GR guys. The term "GR" can be problematic. It can refer to the general subject of general relativity, or it can refer more specifically to Einstein's general theory. If I'm referring to something that might be expected from general relativistic principles, but which //doesn't// seem to be supported by current GR, I usually try to qualify things by referring to "Einstein's GR" as something like "GR1915". But ... What you were actually saying was more along the lines of "If GR is right, and even if black holes form ... then thanks to QM and Hawking radiation, they ought to evaporate almost immediately anyway, so they ain't dangerous." I misunderstood the emphasis. Crossed wires. (We now return you to your regular programming ... ) Hawking radiation combines Unruh radiation and the equivalence principle, both classical observations. The attachment to QM is more subtle than you imagine. grin Actually, I seem to have been trying to make that very point myself, off and on, for much of the last ten years. Not, it has to be said, to an overwhelmingly positive response from the physics community. If the idea of "classical" Hawking radiation is now beginning to catch on, and is starting to become respectable, then that's a development that I'm very happy about! =Erk= (Eric Baird) www.relativitybook.com : " Oh, what sad times are these when passing ruffians can : say Ni at will to old ladies. There is a pestilence upon this : land, nothing is sacred. Even those who arrange and design : shrubberies are under considerable economic stress in this : period in history." : - "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" (1975) |
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#210
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Dear Eric Baird:
Eric Baird wrote in message ... .... Perhaps Hawking radiation might be expected under //someone else's// general theory, but I don't see how the effect can appear classically in a model that's supposed to reduce to the SR equations of motion, as Einstein's was. How fortuitous... http://groups.google.com/group/sci.a...c52e34b1d93586 .... just posted on sci.astro. See the approximations that reduce GR to SR involve the patching technique to connect little bits of spacetime for forming a "solution space". GR allows curvature (the patches can be slightly skew), and SR does not. Not entirely as mysterious as you imagine... David A. Smith |
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