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#341
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"shuba" writes:
[shuba]: I didn't present an original argument in the article to which you responded. I did insert an editorial comment to the effect that for you not to mention the approximation after being corrected so many times is in my opinion dishonest, a view which I still hold. My point was that, if you had read the paper I have refereed you to several times now instead of simply quoting old, defeated arguments, you would plainly see why the "approximation" argument is no longer on the table. I've already given you a short summary of those reasons. But you act as if a reasoned argument cannot trump the previously expressed opinions of experts. If that were true, theoretical science could make very little progress. [shuba]: Steve Carlip wrote: "No, it is part of the basic point you are missing. If you want to know exact properties of GR, you start with exact properties of the field equations, not with an approximation that can hide those properties." Precisely as I said - an argument raised and answered. The field equations describe the gravitational potential field. Changes in gravitational potential are gravitational waves, which propagate at speed c in everyone's book. But my arguments dealt exclusively with the GR equations of motion, which are expressions for 3-space acceleration. There is no exact expression for these. They are expansions in velocity and potential, and the ones in MTW are complete to fourth order in velocity and second order on potential, which is easily accurate enough for all existing applications (typically 16 decimal places). Yet the speed of gravity issue is about what happened to the missing first-order velocity term that represents force propagation delay (typically in the fourth decimal place). So the "approximation" issue has become a "red herring" argument for anyone who continues to raise or defend it. However, my "uninformed" remark referred specifically to you for taking sides on a technical issue without reading the published technical paper with the latest arguments about that issue. [shuba]: Steve Carlip wrote: "Tom is confusing "the field equations of general relativity" with "the first post-Newtonian approximation to the equations of motion of an N-body system, as derived from the field equations of general relativity." The latter can, indeed, be given an "instantaneous propagation" interpretation. The former cannot." Of course the latter equations, which are the GR equations of motion describing gravitational force/acceleration, must be interpreted as having instant propagation. That has been one of my points right along. And these are the equations used to test GR against observations. So they had better be representative of GR, or else GR is untested experimentally. As for the GR field equations, they describe gravitational potential, changes in which propagate at speed c. I'm not confusing these two different sets of equations. Indeed, I provided references to Carlip and others to the papers where the equations of motion were first derived from solutions to the field equations. However, Carlip's comment makes it appear that the *physical* distinction (as opposed to the mathematical one) between a potential field and a propagating force was not clear in his mind at the time. That is why Vigier and I spent much time in our "Foundations of Physics" paper drawing this distinction. Without it, the physics of GR would be confusing to anyone. [shuba]: In view of the above, your response . applies to those who actually made the arguments, Carlip and Roberts. If you hadn't meant to say that, perhaps you shouldn't have. I apologize for any ambiguity in my choice of words. Have I now clarified that my reference to "the uninformed" was intended to refer to those who persisted in making arguments already defeated by published works, which does not include Roberts or Carlip but does include you? -|Tom|- Tom Van Flandern - Washington, DC - see our web site on replacement astronomy research at http://metaresearch.org |
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#342
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Tom Van Flandern wrote:
My point was that, if you had read the paper I have refereed you to several times now instead of simply quoting old, defeated arguments, you would plainly see why the "approximation" argument is no longer on the table. I've already given you a short summary of those reasons. But you act as if a reasoned argument cannot trump the previously expressed opinions of experts. If that were true, theoretical science could make very little progress. To my knowledge, *none* of the experts in physics and mathematics who have addressed your faster-than-light claims on usenet are satisfied that your argument holds water. In fact, the consensus seems to be that you use terminology poorly and imprecisely. [shuba]: Steve Carlip wrote: "No, it is part of the basic point you are missing. If you want to know exact properties of GR, you start with exact properties of the field equations, not with an approximation that can hide those properties." Precisely as I said - an argument raised and answered. The field equations describe the gravitational potential field. Changes in gravitational potential are gravitational waves, which propagate at speed c in everyone's book. But my arguments dealt exclusively with the GR equations of motion, which are expressions for 3-space acceleration. There is no exact expression for these. They are expansions in velocity and potential, and the ones in MTW are complete to fourth order in velocity and second order on potential, which is easily accurate enough for all existing applications (typically 16 decimal places). Yet the speed of gravity issue is about what happened to the missing first-order velocity term that represents force propagation delay (typically in the fourth decimal place). So the "approximation" issue has become a "red herring" argument for anyone who continues to raise or defend it. However, my "uninformed" remark referred specifically to you for taking sides on a technical issue without reading the published technical paper with the latest arguments about that issue. [shuba]: Steve Carlip wrote: "Tom is confusing "the field equations of general relativity" with "the first post-Newtonian approximation to the equations of motion of an N-body system, as derived from the field equations of general relativity." The latter can, indeed, be given an "instantaneous propagation" interpretation. The former cannot." Of course the latter equations, which are the GR equations of motion describing gravitational force/acceleration, must be interpreted as having instant propagation. That has been one of my points right along. And these are the equations used to test GR against observations. So they had better be representative of GR, or else GR is untested experimentally. As for the GR field equations, they describe gravitational potential, changes in which propagate at speed c. I'm not confusing these two different sets of equations. Indeed, I provided references to Carlip and others to the papers where the equations of motion were first derived from solutions to the field equations. However, Carlip's comment makes it appear that the *physical* distinction (as opposed to the mathematical one) between a potential field and a propagating force was not clear in his mind at the time. That is why Vigier and I spent much time in our "Foundations of Physics" paper drawing this distinction. Without it, the physics of GR would be confusing to anyone. [shuba]: In view of the above, your response . applies to those who actually made the arguments, Carlip and Roberts. If you hadn't meant to say that, perhaps you shouldn't have. I apologize for any ambiguity in my choice of words. Have I now clarified that my reference to "the uninformed" was intended to refer to those who persisted in making arguments already defeated by published works, which does not include Roberts or Carlip but does include you? -|Tom|- It may give you pleasure to have someone to label "uninformed", especially since that's basically the label which genuine experts have given you. However, your claims to have defeated the arguments against your ideas seem to be convincing only to yourself. I'm not an expert, and I do rely on what is said by people I consider the most knowledgeable. I also look at how people present themselves. Most everything about your approach leads me to believe you are not particularly honest, from your claims above to the particular choice of journals to which you've published. One thought on the last point, and I'm probably done with this thread. One of few things we appear to agree on is that Carlip does deserve to be labeled an informed expert. In response to a query I made on usenet, Carlip gave an interesting overview regarding journal publication of general relativity articles. With this response in mind, in certainly looks as if, whether by design or default, Van Flandern has avoided those publications in which the most knowledgeable reviewers about the subject can be found. ---Tim Shuba--- |
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#343
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"shuba" writes:
[tvf]: you act as if a reasoned argument cannot trump the previously expressed opinions of experts. If that were true, theoretical science could make very little progress. [shuba]: To my knowledge, *none* of the experts in physics and mathematics who have addressed your faster-than-light claims on usenet are satisfied that your argument holds water. And yet none of them have anything of substance left to say in rebuttal. But I can assure you that my email feedback is overwhelmingly positive - not just because people think or hope my published arguments are right, but more because they can at least *understand* them. "The discovery of truth is prevented more effectively not by the false appearance of things present and which mislead into error, not directly by weakness of the reasoning powers, but by preconceived opinion, by prejudice." -- Arthur Schopenhauer [shuba] In fact, the consensus seems to be that you use terminology poorly and imprecisely. Until recently, I continued in the naïve belief that most relativists knew basic physics. It has been an eye-opener to discover that many of them cannot go beyond mathematical arguments into the physics and experiments behind the math. Yet this is the domain where all my arguments occur because I have no issues with the math of GR, but only with the physical interpretation. So it does not now surprise me to hear this claim. However, what counts is not USENET polls, but the opinions of reviewers and editors of journals and rank-and-file physicists, where I seem to be having no such problems. In fact, the majority of USENET readers who choose to communicate with me remark on how much more sense my messages make than the messages of those who try to counter mine. (You might fairly remark that I am describing a biased selection of opinions; but then, your selection is no less biased.) [shuba]: It may give you pleasure to have someone to label "uninformed", especially since that's basically the label which genuine experts have given you. However, your claims to have defeated the arguments against your ideas seem to be convincing only to yourself. You forgot that I have a co-author on my most recent work, another senior physicist; and that my three published papers all went through refereeing and past editors; and that I have been involved in USENET discussions on this topic for more than a decade, during which time many others have found the ideas attractive and said so here or on their web sites. So which group is better entitled to make that claim that their ideas are convincing only to themselves, the group that has answered all objections and repeatedly published its claims, or the group that has fallen silent and has nothing of value left to say except the occasional ad hominem remark? [shuba]: I'm not an expert, and I do rely on what is said by people I consider the most knowledgeable. I also look at how people present themselves. Most everything about your approach leads me to believe you are not particularly honest, from your claims above to the particular choice of journals to which you've published. Well, I am supposedly an "expert" in the physics of gravitation and in celestial mechanics, which is the field in which I earned my doctorate at Yale. I am well-familiar with mathematical relativity, but not especially expert there. However, the relevant field for my published papers is the former where I have more expertise than most on USENET, not the latter where I don't. And one of the main reasons why my papers draw so little response from relativists is that their expertise is not in these areas relevant to the physical interpretation of GR. Mine is. So you have chosen to follow experts in the wrong field of expertise to judge my published papers. (That doesn't make my arguments correct. It simply means you have chosen less qualified judges to pin your hopes on.) And speaking of the occasional ad hominem remark. Of course, you are unable to defend your "dishonest" claim or your "choice of journals" claim with anything of substance. But I understand the frustration that leads you to lash out in this way. By your own admission, you have established some criteria about whose opinions to trust. You probably have based many of your life decisions around those criteria. It follows that, if you have misjudged me, you would have a *lot* of re-thinking and soul-searching to do because your criteria for deciding matters where experts disagree would be called into question. This is a difficulty for all authority-oriented people, not just you. To avoid that dilemma and the problem that so many people follow poor leaders and fool themselves with their beliefs, science has set up some rules about formulating and testing hypotheses and insulating the results from the biases that we all bring to the table. I recommend some reading about scientific method - not the "testing" part that everyone knows, but the "controls against bias" part that few still put into practice. Without controls, we would continually select favorable data, reject unfavorable data, and interpret all events as supporting our most cherished beliefs. "Controls" is the area where your personal criteria are defective, IMO, because you do not require them in your choice of experts. If you look into this, your criteria will probably need revision; but someday you will be very glad you did. It might even save your life or that of a loved one because medical doctors are no more exempt from fooling themselves and being collectively wrong than are experts in any field. [shuba]: One of few things we appear to agree on is that Carlip does deserve to be labeled an informed expert. In response to a query I made on usenet, Carlip gave an interesting overview regarding journal publication of general relativity articles. . With this response in mind, in certainly looks as if, whether by design or default, Van Flandern has avoided those publications in which the most knowledgeable reviewers about the subject can be found. As I noted above, I was not writing about mathematical relativity, so those journals would not have been the most appropriate for my paper. I wrote about the physical interpretation of relativity. For that and the physical interpretation of quantum mechanics (the area of expertise of my co-author, J.P. Vigier), Physics Letters would be one the most appropriate journals, which is where the paper went first. But I'm dodging an issue here that I really should address. Anyone who thinks that the leading journals are unbiased forums is inexperienced or naïve. I do not know of any of them that do not have "reject at the door" criteria, and that includes my own journal (Meta Research Bulletin). These criteria are persons or institutions or subjects or methods or other things that get an automatic rejection without review. Obviously, the tolerance of individual journals to non-conformist ideas varies widely. But ultimately, "experts" in any given area tend to choose one or a few favorite journals where they support the editor and where the editor in turn recognizes them as "the experts". Then they can reject non-conformist papers that come to these selected journals and denounce other non-conformist papers as "not published in a journal recognized by experts", which is then a self-aggrandizing criterion. Steve Carlip and I have been debating the "speed of gravity" issue for about a decade now. Suppose I submitted a very good paper (suspend your disbelief about that being possible :-) to "Classical and Quantum Gravity", which is at the top of Carlip's recommended journals list. The editor might well choose Carlip as a referee because he might be thought highly qualified in this area, even though my arguments deal mostly with celestial mechanics, physics experiments, and equations of motion. Carlip would probably not like my paper's conclusion (he has not up to now), so he might reject my paper with some technical argument over the editor's head. If the editor gives me a chance to respond at all (a long shot at many journals), and I respond with a clear argument that undermines Carlip's reason for rejection, the editor has a major problem on his hands. He depends on Carlip's support and needs to continue calling on his expertise in the future because Carlip is a member of that journal's editorial board. Given the need to upset either the author or the editorial board member, which way do you suppose the editor will go? More importantly, why would the editor go down a path that might put him into such a bind? The easiest way is rejection-at-the-door for anything potentially upsetting to journal supporters or board members. The author usually never learns what hit him. By contrast, good scientists never fear to engage, debate, test, and use controls against bias. Consider a scenario for dealing with this controversy that is designed to advance science. Carlip, acting as a member of the editorial board, invites me to submit a paper to CQG and to personally oversee the review process to ensure that it is both thorough and fair. He selects reviewers who are expert in each relevant area. He does not require that I convince skeptical reviewers, but does require that I show the paper contains no demonstrable error. As long as the reviewer and editor are prepared to accept a paper that is not clearly erroneous, and the author(s) can admit error when it is pointed out, then react appropriately (correct error or withdraw paper), this should represent the fairest way to advance science and get at nature's truth. But the system is what it is because few reviewers, editors, or authors act in this idealistic way. In yesterday's science news I read the following: "Why did it take half a century to figure out that Piltdown man was a phony? 'The people who believed in it were very powerful", . especially Arthur Smith Woodward, the museum's leading geologist at the time of the discovery. 'You had to be very cautious about taking after people like this.'" The same can be said for the editorial boards at many journals. I once had a paper rejected at the door - not because of any fault in it but because publishing it would be "too risky" to the journal's reputation regardless of what reviewers might have said. Here's another challenge. Lorentzian relativity (LR) competes with special relativity (SR) to best describe the relativity of motion. SR has a universal speed limit, c. LR has no speed limit. The key difference between the two theories is that SR applies the Lorentz transformations both ways between any two inertial frames, whereas LR applies them only one way, from the local gravitational potential field to a relatively moving inertial frame. So why do some "experts" continue to claim the universe must have a speed limit when LR remains as experimentally viable as SR? Clearly, while LR is still viable, such a claim has no firm experimental underpinnings. To justify such a claim, any published refutation of Lorentzian relativity or the Lorentz Ether Theory would suffice. For a matter this important to physics, can you imagine that such a refutation is possible but no one has ever bothered to do it? -|Tom|- Tom Van Flandern - Washington, DC - see our web site on replacement astronomy research at http://metaresearch.org |
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Paul Stowe wrote:
As well you should Bill, that IS the whole point. Namely, Quantum behavior arrises from so-called classical systems... It all in what matter is, and how that CAN react to AND interact with its parent medium. Bill Hobba wrote: Then you have not taken on the import of the Kochen-Specker theorem which strongly suggests otherwise. No Bill, it is you, not I that does not realize the 'limitations' that 'idealized assumptions' set on ANY theorem. See, http://math.ucsd.edu/~dmeyer/researc...snull/abs.html http://confer.uj.edu.pl/bell.workshop/doc/breuer.pdf http://tph.tuwien.ac.at/~svozil/publ/2000-co.pdf As I said in previous threads people have tried to escape the Kochen-Specker theorem in numerous ways - all have failed. The refutation of the claim finite precision measurement nullifies the Kochen-Specker theorem can be found at http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0104024. Bill Hobba wrote: Classical systems are inherently both value definite and noncontextual. Quantum systems are not. Paul stowe replied: Sigh,... Sigh.... Thanks Bill |
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#345
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Tom Van Flandern:
"shuba" writes: [tvf]: you act as if a reasoned argument cannot trump the previously expressed opinions of experts. If that were true, theoretical science could make very little progress. [shuba]: To my knowledge, *none* of the experts in physics and mathematics who have addressed your faster-than-light claims on usenet are satisfied that your argument holds water. And yet none of them have anything of substance left to say in rebuttal. That isn't true. You claimed the gradients in E&M and gravity "propagate instantaneously", so that there was no reason that one couldn't make things go faster than light. I gave you an example where a charge sees only a static potential difference accelerating it, but cannot be made to exceed the speed of light. So far you haven't answered that. But I can assure you that my email feedback is overwhelmingly positive - not just because people think or hope my published arguments are right, but more because they can at least *understand* them. Lot's of people posting to this newsgroup claim the understand special relativity, too, but in followups, demonstrate otherwise. [...] Until recently, I continued in the naïve belief that most relativists knew basic physics. Until I started reading sci.physics.relativity, I had the naive belief that the ether was a rather arcane subject of interest to historians rather than something anyone who had studied physics would take seriously. So much for expectations. It has been an eye-opener to discover that many of them cannot go beyond mathematical arguments into the physics and experiments behind the math. Having read one of your papers, I took you to be one of those to whom you refer. Your description of special relativity was so tortured and mangled, that it would have difficult to tell you were describing special relativity had you not stated what you were describing. Methinks your description of special relativity is deliberately created to make special relativity appear confusing in order to promote your own version of LET and make it seem less tortured by comparison. Yet this is the domain where all my arguments occur because I have no issues with the math of GR, but only with the physical interpretation. That makes us even. I have a great deal of difficulty believing you could have studied relativity and come up with your physical interpretation of it. [...] You forgot that I have a co-author on my most recent work, another senior physicist; and that my three published papers all went through refereeing and past editors; and that I have been involved in USENET discussions on this topic for more than a decade, during which time many others have found the ideas attractive and said so here or on their web sites. So which group is better entitled to make that claim that their ideas are convincing only to themselves, the group that has answered all objections and repeatedly published its claims, or the group that has fallen silent and has nothing of value left to say except the occasional ad hominem remark? Peter lynds was published in "Foundations of Physics Letters", despite his article not being very novel if one read between the lines and gave him credit for expressing an idea rather common to quantum mechanics, except not doing it very well. So? That only tells me what the stuff that doesn't get published must be like. [...] continue calling on his expertise in the future because Carlip is a member of that journal's editorial board. Given the need to upset either the author or the editorial board member, which way do you suppose the editor will go? More importantly, why would the editor go down a path that might put him into such a bind? The easiest way is rejection-at-the-door for anything potentially upsetting to journal supporters or board members. The author usually never learns what hit him. I can't address the editorial policy of that journal, but the aps journals encourage authors to submit a list of referees the author believes is qualified to judge the merits of the article being submitted. [...] |
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#346
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"Bilge" writes:
[Bilge]: You claimed the gradients in E&M and gravity "propagate instantaneously", so that there was no reason that one couldn't make things go faster than light. I gave you an example where a charge sees only a static potential difference accelerating it, but cannot be made to exceed the speed of light. So far you haven't answered that. In our previous exchange, you at first appeared interested and asked good questions. But some answer I gave was apparently not to your liking, so you made some non-sequitur assertions without further questions, which I took to be the end of your interest. I will take your last sentence above as an implied question and repeat the answer I gave previously, but will use new phraseology in the hope of being better understood. First, your summary of what I said is out of context and disorganized. Among the things I do claim are these: ** In GR and electrodynamics, potential fields exist that behave like optical mediums, and in which propagation speeds for any disturbance are (without dispute) equal to the speed of light. ** In GR and electrodynamics, when mathematical gradients are taken in those fields, the process used is to take partial derivatives with respect to instantaneous spatial coordinates rather than retarded spatial coordinates. This is what I call an "instantaneous gradient". It is obviously appropriate for some fixed point within those fields, and just as obviously inappropriate for a moving point (such as an orbiting body or moving charge) within those fields. ** The gradient of the potential is supposed to represent the force, defined as the time rate of change of the momentum of a target body. Changes in momentum propagate at some speed: the speed that is a factor in the definition of momentum, which is the (relativistically scaled) product of a mass and a velocity. If such a force is to remain equal to the gradient of the potential, that gradient *must* be a retarded gradient and consider the motion of the source during the finite propagation time from source mass/charge to target body. ** Radiation pressure is an example of a force that propagates at speed c and appears to emanate from the retarded source position. This propagation delay results in spiral orbits. Separately, I noted that Lorentzian relativity (LR) is a viable model that competes with special relativity (SR) to represent the relativity of motion. Yet LR, unlike SR, has no speed limit. For that reason, physics has no problem with FTL propagation and communication in forward time at any speed. Only SR has a problem with such things; but SR does not have to be the right choice between SR and LR; and SR is contradicted by experiments showing forces in gravity and electrodynamics propagating strongly FTL in forward time. Reverting to your question about accelerating charges to FTL speeds, in physics no body can be pushed to a higher speed than the speed of the force doing the pushing. In accelerator experiments, all applied forces are operating at or below the speed of light. So an FTL speed cannot result, just as a propeller plane cannot achieve a speed faster than sound unless a force other than the sub-sonic one from the propellers operates. The same holds for your charge accelerated by a static potential difference. Waves or disturbances in gravitational or electrodynamic potentials propagate at the speed of light. Only gravitational force and Coulomb force propagate strongly FTL. I provided some additional details in my answer to Carlip in another thread. [Bilge]: Your description of special relativity was so tortured and mangled, that it would have difficult to tell you were describing special relativity had you not stated what you were describing. Methinks your description of special relativity is deliberately created to make special relativity appear confusing in order to promote your own version of LET and make it seem less tortured by comparison. I assume you refer to "What the Global Positioning System tells us about the twins paradox", Episteme #6 pt. II, http://www.dipmat.unipg.it/~bartocci/ep6/ep6-vanfl.htm (2002/12/21); also published in MetaRes.Bull. 11, 39-46 (2002). Methinks you have never understood why SR has created so much controversy over the years and continues to do so. If you think in causality terms instead of math terms, acceleration cannot be invoked as the cause of the asymmetry in SR because the whole Twins paradox can be done without accelerations. So most "resolutions" of the paradox are no such thing. My paper discusses the first and only explanation I've seen that explains how to get the twins result without accelerations. The main new insight is to follow what happens to a "moving" clock adjusted in the same way as GPS satellite clocks are adjusted pre-launch to maintain continuous synchronization in orbit with ground clocks. In that way, the traveler carries two clocks: a native clock and a clock always reading Earth time. It provides much insight into how SR and LR work to explain nature. No surprise: the LR explanation is much simpler. But if you don't already know that, you aren't staying current in the field. -|Tom|- Tom Van Flandern - Washington, DC - see our web site on replacement astronomy research at http://metaresearch.org |
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#347
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"Tom Van Flandern" wrote in message ...
"Bilge" writes: [Bilge]: You claimed the gradients in E&M and gravity "propagate instantaneously", so that there was no reason that one couldn't make things go faster than light. I gave you an example where a charge sees only a static potential difference accelerating it, but cannot be made to exceed the speed of light. So far you haven't answered that. In our previous exchange, you at first appeared interested and asked good questions. But some answer I gave was apparently not to your liking, so you made some non-sequitur assertions without further questions, which I took to be the end of your interest. I will take your last sentence above as an implied question and repeat the answer I gave previously, but will use new phraseology in the hope of being better understood. First, your summary of what I said is out of context and disorganized. Among the things I do claim are these: ** In GR and electrodynamics, potential fields exist that behave like optical mediums, and in which propagation speeds for any disturbance are (without dispute) equal to the speed of light. ** In GR and electrodynamics, when mathematical gradients are taken in those fields, the process used is to take partial derivatives with respect to instantaneous spatial coordinates rather than retarded spatial coordinates. This is what I call an "instantaneous gradient". It is obviously appropriate for some fixed point within those fields, and just as obviously inappropriate for a moving point (such as an orbiting body or moving charge) within those fields. ** The gradient of the potential is supposed to represent the force, defined as the time rate of change of the momentum of a target body. Changes in momentum propagate at some speed: the speed that is a factor in the definition of momentum, which is the (relativistically scaled) product of a mass and a velocity. If such a force is to remain equal to the gradient of the potential, that gradient *must* be a retarded gradient and consider the motion of the source during the finite propagation time from source mass/charge to target body. ** Radiation pressure is an example of a force that propagates at speed c and appears to emanate from the retarded source position. This propagation delay results in spiral orbits. Separately, I noted that Lorentzian relativity (LR) is a viable model that competes with special relativity (SR) to represent the relativity of motion. Yet LR, unlike SR, has no speed limit. For that reason, physics has no problem with FTL propagation and communication in forward time at any speed. Only SR has a problem with such things; but SR does not have to be the right choice between SR and LR; and SR is contradicted by experiments showing forces in gravity and electrodynamics propagating strongly FTL in forward time. Reverting to your question about accelerating charges to FTL speeds, in physics no body can be pushed to a higher speed than the speed of the force doing the pushing. In accelerator experiments, all applied forces are operating at or below the speed of light. So an FTL speed cannot result, just as a propeller plane cannot achieve a speed faster than sound unless a force other than the sub-sonic one from the propellers operates. The same holds for your charge accelerated by a static potential difference. Waves or disturbances in gravitational or electrodynamic potentials propagate at the speed of light. Only gravitational force and Coulomb force propagate strongly FTL. I provided some additional details in my answer to Carlip in another thread. [Bilge]: Your description of special relativity was so tortured and mangled, that it would have difficult to tell you were describing special relativity had you not stated what you were describing. Methinks your description of special relativity is deliberately created to make special relativity appear confusing in order to promote your own version of LET and make it seem less tortured by comparison. I assume you refer to "What the Global Positioning System tells us about the twins paradox", Episteme #6 pt. II, http://www.dipmat.unipg.it/~bartocci/ep6/ep6-vanfl.htm (2002/12/21); also published in MetaRes.Bull. 11, 39-46 (2002). Methinks you have never understood why SR has created so much controversy over the years and continues to do so. If you think in causality terms instead of math terms, acceleration cannot be invoked as the cause of the asymmetry in SR because the whole Twins paradox can be done without accelerations. So most "resolutions" of the paradox are no such thing. My paper discusses the first and only explanation I've seen that explains how to get the twins result without accelerations. The main new insight is to follow what happens to a "moving" clock adjusted in the same way as GPS satellite clocks are adjusted pre-launch to maintain continuous synchronization in orbit with ground clocks. In that way, the traveler carries two clocks: a native clock and a clock always reading Earth time. It provides much insight into how SR and LR work to explain nature. No surprise: the LR explanation is much simpler. But if you don't already know that, you aren't staying current in the field. -|Tom|- Tom Van Flandern - Washington, DC - see our web site on replacement astronomy research at http://metaresearch.org xxein: Sorry. This universe will not hand out a cigar to you either. |
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