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| Tags: allien, genius, learn, wants, who |
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#31
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On May 8, 3:37*pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
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. cry? |
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#32
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On May 8, 4:54 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
On May 8, 3:36 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote: Go back to read my older posts, and dont 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. Well, I have even a better idea. You can choose to ignore you stupid and trollish comments. Next time, whenever you try to bring up how I did not address your stupid and trollish comments, you will know why. That is assuming you possess some rudimentary reasoning. If not, it is no sweat. That is why you remain a multi-year super-senior at the University of Alaska majoring in basket weaving. shrug |
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#33
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On May 8, 1:08 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
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 Then the first formula is not a solution. Calculate its Ricci tensor and you'll see it's nonzero. (I'll skip the rest.) -- Jan Bielawski |
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#34
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On May 9, 1:11 am, JanPB wrote:
On May 8, 1:08 pm, 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 Then the first formula is not a solution. Calculate its Ricci tensor and you'll see it's nonzero. Oh, you are correct. It is my mistake --- a typo. Please allow me to correct the first equation. ds^2 = G c^2 dt^2 / (1 + K^2 / r^2) 4 r^2 (1 + K^2 / r^2) dr^2 / K^2 K^2 (1 + r^4 / K^4) dO^2 The following is also a solution where the gravitational force follows the inverse cubed law. ds^2 = G c^2 dt^2 (1 + K^2 / r^2) 4 r^2 dr^2 / K^2 / (1 + K^2 / r^2) r^4 dO^2 / K^2 |
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#35
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On May 8, 4:55 pm, Eric Gisse wrote:
cry? Yes, crying wont do you any good. You remain a multi-year super- senior. shrug |
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#36
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On May 9, 1:11 am, JanPB wrote:
On May 8, 1:08 pm, 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 Then the first formula is not a solution. Calculate its Ricci tensor and you'll see it's nonzero. Oh, you are correct. It is my mistake --- a typo. Please allow me to correct the first equation. 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^2 + K^2)^2 dO^2 / K^2 The following is also a solution where the gravitational force follows the inverse cubed law. ds^2 = G c^2 dt^2 (1 + K^2 / r^2) 4 r^2 dr^2 / K^2 / (1 + K^2 / r^2) r^4 dO^2 / K^2 |
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#37
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On May 9, 12:32 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
On May 9, 1:11 am, JanPB wrote: On May 8, 1:08 pm, 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 Then the first formula is not a solution. Calculate its Ricci tensor and you'll see it's nonzero. Oh, you are correct. It is my mistake --- a typo. Please allow me to correct the first equation. 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^2 + K^2)^2 dO^2 / K^2 Its Ricci curvature is still nonzero if r denotes the same coordinate as in Schwarzschild. Try it. I recommend Cartan moving frame method as it's much faster than Christoffel symbols. The following is also a solution where the gravitational force follows the inverse cubed law. ds^2 = G c^2 dt^2 (1 + K^2 / r^2) 4 r^2 dr^2 / K^2 / (1 + K^2 / r^2) r^4 dO^2 / K^2 Same thing: if r is the same then Ricci of the above is nonzero. OTOH if r denotes sqrt(K * Schwarzschild-r) then Ricci of the above equals 0 but in that case it's the same solution as Schwarzschild - you simply change the labels you attach to the spheres from "r" to "r^2/ K". -- Jan Bielawski |
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#38
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On May 10, 3:09 am, JanPB wrote:
On May 9, 12:32 pm, 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^2 + K^2)^2 dO^2 / K^2 Its Ricci curvature is still nonzero if r denotes the same coordinate as in Schwarzschild. Try it. Its Ricci and Einstein tensors both vanish. In doing so, it is also sharing the same coordinate system with the Schwarzschild metric. I recommend Cartan moving frame method as it's much faster than Christoffel symbols. There is no short cut in such type of mathematics. shrug The following is also a solution where the gravitational force follows the inverse cubed law. ds^2 = G c^2 dt^2 (1 + K^2 / r^2) 4 r^2 dr^2 / K^2 / (1 + K^2 / r^2) r^4 dO^2 / K^2 Same thing: if r is the same then Ricci of the above is nonzero. But mathematically, its Ricci and Einstein tensors also vanish. shrug OTOH if r denotes sqrt(K * Schwarzschild-r) then Ricci of the above equals 0 but in that case it's the same solution as Schwarzschild - you simply change the labels you attach to the spheres from "r" to "r^2/ K". Perhaps, there is a flaw in your Cartan whatever. As I said, anyone who possesses mathematical software like Eric Gisse can easily verify it, and I do not see any complaint from that multi-year super-senior. shrug |
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#39
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On May 10, 8:42*pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
On May 10, 3:09 am, JanPB wrote: On May 9, 12:32 pm, 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^2 + K^2)^2 dO^2 / K^2 Its Ricci curvature is still nonzero if r denotes the same coordinate as in Schwarzschild. Try it. Its Ricci and Einstein tensors both vanish. *In doing so, it is also sharing the same coordinate system with the Schwarzschild metric. Then evaluate surface area of a sphere in both coordinate systems. You'll see something interesting if you actually do the computation. I recommend Cartan moving frame method as it's much faster than Christoffel symbols. There is no short cut in such type of mathematics. *shrug Based on your years of not studying the subject? The following is also a solution where the gravitational force follows the inverse cubed law. ds^2 = G c^2 dt^2 (1 + K^2 / r^2) 4 r^2 dr^2 / K^2 / (1 + K^2 / r^2) * * * r^4 dO^2 / K^2 Same thing: if r is the same then Ricci of the above is nonzero. But mathematically, its Ricci and Einstein tensors also vanish. shrug Not if they use the Schwarzschild coordinate system. OTOH if r denotes sqrt(K * Schwarzschild-r) then Ricci of the above equals 0 but in that case it's the same solution as Schwarzschild - you simply change the labels you attach to the spheres from "r" to "r^2/ K". Perhaps, there is a flaw in your Cartan whatever. *As I said, anyone who possesses mathematical software like Eric Gisse can easily verify it, and I do not see any complaint from that multi-year super-senior. shrug That's because we [JanPB, me] understand that the r you use is different from the r in Schwarzschild even if you don't. You appear to think that the coordinates determine the physics. You claim otherwise and you can't explain why Minkowski space in Cartesian coordinates is different from Minkowski space in spherical coordinates, but when presented with the Schwarzschild metric in two different coordinates your GR myopia sets in and you spray ink to avoid discussing the subject. |
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#40
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On May 10, 9:42 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
On May 10, 3:09 am, JanPB wrote: On May 9, 12:32 pm, 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^2 + K^2)^2 dO^2 / K^2 Its Ricci curvature is still nonzero if r denotes the same coordinate as in Schwarzschild. Try it. Its Ricci and Einstein tensors both vanish. In doing so, it is also sharing the same coordinate system with the Schwarzschild metric. Calculate the Ricci tensor. It's not zero. The R_theta,theta is probably the easiest nonzero component to compute. I recommend Cartan moving frame method as it's much faster than Christoffel symbols. There is no short cut in such type of mathematics. shrug Cartan's method utilizes the skew symmetry of certain combinations of Christoffel symbols (rather than symmetry of the symbols themselves). It allows one to refactor the computations in a more efficient way. In this regard it's a bit like the Euler-Lagrange equation which also cleverly refactors the rather ugly brute-force general-coordinate form of "F=ma". The following is also a solution where the gravitational force follows the inverse cubed law. ds^2 = G c^2 dt^2 (1 + K^2 / r^2) 4 r^2 dr^2 / K^2 / (1 + K^2 / r^2) r^4 dO^2 / K^2 Same thing: if r is the same then Ricci of the above is nonzero. But mathematically, its Ricci and Einstein tensors also vanish. shrug Does "mathematically vanish" mean something different than "vanish"? All I'm saying is that Ricci curvatures of the two metrics you wrote are nonzero if you think of (t,r,theta,phi) as the coordinate system of Schwarzschild. OTOH if r denotes sqrt(K * Schwarzschild-r) then Ricci of the above equals 0 but in that case it's the same solution as Schwarzschild - you simply change the labels you attach to the spheres from "r" to "r^2/ K". Perhaps, there is a flaw in your Cartan whatever. Use Christoffel symbols then. You'll see the terms don't cancel. As I said, anyone who possesses mathematical software like Eric Gisse can easily verify it, and I do not see any complaint from that multi-year super-senior. shrug By all means, use a computer if you prefer. -- Jan Bielawski |
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