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| Tags: allien, genius, learn, wants, who |
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#21
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On May 7, 11:43*am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
[snip] Once again, I have told you there is no such transformation. *shrug Each solution to the field equations is independent of each other using the same set of coordinate system. Then prove it. Do you not know how, or do you somehow think that proves nothing? Can you dig that, multi-year super-senior? |
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#22
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On May 7, 2:40 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
On May 7, 11:43 am, Koobee Wublee wrote: Once again, I have told you there is no such transformation. shrug Each solution to the field equations is independent of each other using the same set of coordinate system. Then prove it. The troll sign comes out of you once again. As a multi-year super- senior, is this not getting old? I have already presented unchallengeable arguments to my claim. You need to address my claim instead of resorting to these trollish behaviors. shrug |
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#23
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On May 6, 9:55*pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
On May 6, 8:28 pm, JanPB wrote: On May 6, 2:24 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote: Another solution that is static, spherically symmetric, and (this time) asymptotically flat is the following. ds^2 = G c^2 dt^2 / (1 + K^2 / r^2) – 4 r^2 (1 + K^2 / r^2) dr^2 / K^2 * * * – r^4 dO^2 / K^2 It's the same solution as Schwarzschild's, you merely changed the numbers labelling the spheres of symmetry. The Schwarzschild metric has the following form. ds^2 = c^2 dt^2 (1 + K / r) – dr^2 / (1 + K / r) – r^2 dO^2 For the queer of England to continue living in that fat castle in the air, he/she/it needs to talk himself/herself/itself into believing both of the above equations are exactly the same. You did not specify whether you wrote both formulas with respect to the same coordinate system or not. Assuming you meant the same coordinates in both formulas, then you are WRONG: the _first_ formula is NOT a solution. You can verify (it's quite tedious) that in fact it doesn't satisfy Ricci=0. The second one does. On the other hand, if you intended the first formula to be obtained by substituing r in the second, then you are also WRONG: in that case both formulas describe the same dot product (i.e., the same solution). It's exactly the same with dr in polar coordinates and x/ sqrt(x^2+y^2)dx + y/sqrt(x^2+y^2)dy in Cartesian -- they are equal covectors. Different formulas summing up to the same value. Same thing when these covectors sit inside a formula for ds^2. Well, both are solutions to the field equations using the spherically symmetric polar coordinate system and nothing else. So you say "the" spherically symmetric polar, so it looks like you indeed intend both expressions for ds^2 to be written in the same coordinate system. In this case your first formula is not a solution. There are no coordinate transformations involved. *They are just independent solutions to the field equations. *shrug Only the second one is a solution in this case. As I said before, for a mere $99,999, I will design the universe of your choice from the field equations. You've just failed. [...] -- Jan Bielawski |
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#24
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On May 8, 1:23 am, JanPB wrote:
On May 8, 12:21 am, Koobee Wublee wrote: ds^2 = G c^2 dt^2 / (1 + K^2 / r^2) – 4 r^2 (1 + K^2 / r^2) dr^2 / K^2 – r^4 dO^2 / K^2 The Schwarzschild metric has the following form. ds^2 = c^2 dt^2 (1 + K / r) – dr^2 / (1 + K / r) – r^2 dO^2 For the queer of England to continue living in that fat castle in the air, he/she/it needs to talk himself/herself/itself into believing both of the above equations are exactly the same. Both coordinate systems are exactly the same. shrug These solutions are solved after the specific forms of the field equations are laid out. Not "after the specific forms of the field equations are laid out" but after a coordinate system has been chosen. This choice is only a computational convenience, not anything fundamental. You are still wrong. shrug These solutions are solved after the specific forms ofthe field equations are laid out. At this moment, the choice of coordinate system should be well established, and no one can change the coordinate. shrug What you've just said is like: once the choice of inches as units has been made during the calculation, no one can convert the result to centimetres. No, that is not what I said. Of course, you are free to convert it to whatever coordinate system of your choice after the solutions are derived. However, at these solutions only apply to one same particular set of coordinate system. shrug I beg your pardon. Is there a typo on my part? It's not a solution if the (t,r,theta,phi) are the same as in the second (Schwarzschild's) formula. Have you personally plug it into the field equations and verify that. Eric Gisse has the software to do so. I am sure if that is not a solution, someone would have complained long ago. So, the first equation is still a valid solution to the field equations using the same coordinate system of (t, r, theta, phi) as the second equation (the Schwarzschild metric). Both should satisfy G_ij = 0, and thus R_ij = 0. No, the first one doesn't if its (t,r,theta,phi) are the same as those in the second formula. shrug On the other hand, if you intended the first formula to be obtained by substituing r in the second, then you are also WRONG: in that case both formulas describe the same dot product (i.e., the same solution). There you go again worshipping that dot product as if a true God. shrug Saying "both formulas describe the same dot product" is worshipping dot product? How? Because you believe in nonsense. shrug Both equations do not describe the same dot product. It's exactly the same with dr in polar coordinates and x/ sqrt(x^2+y^2)dx + y/sqrt(x^2+y^2)dy in Cartesian -- they are equal covectors. Different formulas summing up to the same value. Same thing when these covectors sit inside a formula for ds^2. Yes? Well, if they are equal, then what miracle suddenly makes them unequal when they are inserted in the expression for ds^2? But both equations do not specify the coordinate system being (t, x, y, z). shrug Accusation is very cheap. shrug So are the two formulas written wrt to one coordinate system or two? If two, what transformation did you use? I am telling you both equations employ the same coordinate system. Now, I see you are resorting back to your trollish behavior. There is no point to continue any further, and in the future, please don’t bring up that you have discussed this issue thoroughly with me because it never did. You always resort to this kind of trollish behavior. Now, go back to that fat castle in the air that you call GR and fantasize about yourself being the queer of England, you majesty. |
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#25
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On May 8, 12:08*pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
[snip] Have you personally plug it into the field equations and verify that. Eric Gisse has the software to do so. *I am sure if that is not a solution, someone would have complained long ago. *So, the first equation is still a valid solution to the field equations using the same coordinate system of (t, r, theta, phi) as the second equation (the Schwarzschild metric). This is where your misunderstandings flare up. The coordinate labels do not matter, but the definitions of the coordinates /do/ and if the / definitions/ or (t,t,theta,phi) are the same as in Schwarzschild they are different solutions. However if they are just /labels/, then they are the same solution because I can [and have] found the isomorphism between the two supposedly different solutions. This relates to your inability to compute the area of a sphere - since you blindingly assert '4pir^2' over and over rather than actually compute the answer, you cannot see not only why the modern Schwarzschild solution is preferred but what makes it different from Hilbert's solution and other iterations. Plus JanPB is _more_ than capable of computing elements of differential geometry on his own - he does not need a software package. The software just makes it crazy easy to dispute your stupidities. [snip] |
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#26
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On May 8, 9:34 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
[snip crap] This is where your misunderstandings flare up. The coordinate labels do not matter, but the definitions of the coordinates /do/ and if the / definitions/ or (t,t,theta,phi) are the same as in Schwarzschild they are different solutions. However if they are just /labels/, then they are the same solution because I can [and have] found the isomorphism between the two supposedly different solutions. You even don't know what a isomorphism is, ****head! |
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#27
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On May 8, 12:56*pm, Albertito wrote:
On May 8, 9:34 pm, Eric Gisse wrote: [snip crap] This is where your misunderstandings flare up. The coordinate labels do not matter, but the definitions of the coordinates /do/ and if the / definitions/ or (t,t,theta,phi) are the same as in Schwarzschild they are different solutions. However if they are just /labels/, then they are the same solution because I can [and have] found the isomorphism between the two supposedly different solutions. You even don't know what a isomorphism is, ****head! And you do? Can you define an isomorphism in your own words? |
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#28
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On May 8, 3:03 am, Eric Gisse wrote:
On May 7, 10:48 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote: The troll sign comes out of you once again. As a multi-year super- senior, is this not getting old? I have already presented unchallengeable arguments to my claim. You need to address my claim instead of resorting to these trollish behaviors. shrug Your argument is nothing even close to "unchallengeable" - all you do is assert some crap about "metric times coordinate" and therefore state what the **** ever. Go back to read my older posts, and don’t come back without understanding them. Now, get lost. |
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#29
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On May 8, 1:34 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
On May 8, 12:08 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote: Have you personally plug it into the field equations and verify that. Eric Gisse has the software to do so. I am sure if that is not a solution, someone would have complained long ago. So, the first equation is still a valid solution to the field equations using the same coordinate system of (t, r, theta, phi) as the second equation (the Schwarzschild metric). [crap snipped] I say ‘get lost’. |
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#30
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On May 8, 3:36*pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
On May 8, 3:03 am, Eric Gisse wrote: On May 7, 10:48 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote: The troll sign comes out of you once again. *As a multi-year super- senior, is this not getting old? I have already presented unchallengeable arguments to my claim. *You need to address my claim instead of resorting to these trollish behaviors. *shrug Your argument is nothing even close to "unchallengeable" - all you do is assert some crap about "metric times coordinate" and therefore state what the **** ever. Go back to read my older posts, and don’t come back without understanding them. *Now, get lost. I have a better idea - I'll continue to respond to your stupidities and call them out as such, then laugh as you ineffectively defend yourself with your shield of stupidity. |
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