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| Tags: aether, evidence, existence |
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#91
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"Tom Clarke" schrieb im Newsbeitrag om... "Ilja Schmelzer" wrote in message "Thomas Clarke" schrieb Ether had a major failure in 1886. Relativity explained all the results and has been having predictive successes ever since 1905. Advocates of ether theory have been trying to patch it up ever since. And have succeeded now. See gr-qc/0205035. Looks like a nice piece of work. You identify potentially observable differences between the chi,upsilon -0 limit of GLET and GR, but which of the consequences if chi,upsilon are not zero would you expect to be most observable. You mention consequences for early universe, black holes, gravitational radiation. Are there others? I don't know about others. This does not exclude that there will be others. Especially there are claims that some theories of quantum gravity may be ruled out because violations of some principles at Planck length will lead to observable consequences for observations of something very far. What is the state of motion of the ether? v^i=g^0i/g^00 in the Newtonian background coordinates (which are harmonic). But as you note if GR is true, chi,upsilon -0 and "In this limit the absolute background becomes a hidden variable". And the velocities would become indeterminate. We cannot measure them by local observation. On the other hand, we have boundary conditions (CMBR-frame) and the theory gives a precise equation for the preferred coordinates, thus, we can measure the velocities in such an indirect way very accurate. Actual observation of the predicted aether particle would do. The question is, what would you consider as actual observation? Something that can be reproduced in different laboratories. As for the "knock my socks off" part, something that can't be explained without your aether. What about the EEP? GR cannot explain it, it postulates it. My ether theory derives it. EEP is a postulate underlying geometric GR. GLET has five Axioms. GR has four (or five depending how you count). It's a matter of preference which set of axioms one prefers. I have given here an answer to "something that can't be explained without the ether". But I hope that my ether theory of the standard model gives much better arguments in this direction. It already predicts the 24 8-component spinors of the standard model. BTW, my ether theory of the standard model predicts 24 fermions and already allows to describe strong interaction on them. That doesn't seem to be in the paper above. Yep, it is in other papers on arxiv.org. The technically most advanced papers are hep-th/0310241 and hep-lat/0311009, but I have avoided the e-word in these papers. Instead of (T x L x L) (R^3) I favour today (Aff(3)xCxL)(R^3) as the geometric interpretation and the discrete ether model is given by (Aff(3)xC)(Z^3): In each lattice node we have a cell whose state of deformation is described by Aff(3) - a simple cellular ether. Species doubling gives (Aff(3)xCxL)(R^3) as the continuous limit. Are you counting particles and antiparticles seperately? No. 3 generations, each with lepton, its neutrino, two flavours of three colors of quarks. Do you think you could have gone from Lorentz LET to your GLET if you had not known about Minkowski spacetime? Not known about GR [Einstein geometric approach or Hilbert lagrangian approach]? Of course. (Of course not - it would have been done by others many years before my birth.) There have been two open problems with the LET ether: 1.) Incorporation of gravity (mentioned already by Poincare 1905 with a first attempt of a scalar theory of gravity with c as bounding velocity. We know today simple ways to rule it out which would have been found in not much time.) 2.) The ether was incompressible, which is strange. A description of a compressible ether in terms of rho, v^i, s^ij is quite natural. 3.) There would have been a third problem with observation. Maybe not 1919 as it happened, but not much later. An approach with higher ether density for higher V_Newton would have been the natural answer. The symmetry group as a group has been found by Poincare, the question if this symmetry survives a unification with gravity was natural. Noether's theorem has been found, I think, independent of relativity. To find the equations (or the Hilbert Lagrangian) does not seem to be that difficult, given that two people have done the job almost the same time independently. Maybe you could have, but there is probably no answer to such hypothetical questions. In this case, I think, the answer is possible. That idea comes from Dirac who was combining QM with relativity. in a way which is more LET-like than SR-like. I'm often amused at the etherists who demand particulate, mechanical explanation for physical phenomena and on that basis reject much of modern physics when QFT is a perfectly adequate theory that is based on particles. Ok, that's fun. Even more funny in this context is that I prefer the field picture. (Aff(3)xCxL)(R^3) are continuous fields in my ether theory. The mechanical explanation is on a more fundamental level. Relativists have tried hard to make Dirac's results more SR-like. This was reached only much later by Gupta and Bleuler using an indefinite Hilbert space. Dirac constructed his equation so that it was manifestly Lorentz invariant and yet was a QM equation. So I really don't see why you say it is no SR-like. The manifest invariant form is i gamma^mu d_mu psi = m psi. The quantization rules for the EM field in Dirac-Fermi quantization are even more LET-like. In time direction the role of creation and annihilation operators was changed, which requires a preferred frame. The original Dirac equation id_t psi = (ialpha_i d_i + m beta) psi is also more LET-like. Can you define what you mean by "LET-like"? Giving Lorentz invariance for observables starting with a not obviously Lorentz invariant description. This equation had strange solutions which he eventually had courage to suggest were the basis of real particles. With a picture in mind which was very ether-like (with a "sea" of filled states). And which was later very successful in condensed matter theory (electrons and holes in semiconductors). Maybe my understanding of the Dirac equation already has Gupta-Bleuler folded in already. "Gupta-Bleuler" is new to me and I see their 1950 work is being recently cited a lot with regard to string theory and supersymmetry. Gupta-Bleuler is about the EM field. Why would a LET theorist find the mixed derivative orders of the Schrodinger equation a problem? [first order time, second order space] Because it does not allow to obtain the observable Lorentz-invariance. Note that Lorentz-invariance would have been a guiding principle of LET science almost as much as in the relativistic paradigm. "Almost" means the following: People would have always preferred something Lorentz-invariant. This would have been required for observables, but, if available, preferred for hidden variables too. The only difference is that they would not have rejected theories which have hidden not Lorentz-invariant variables. Ilja |
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#92
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Paul Stowe:
On 25 Oct 2004 14:24:31 -0700, (Paul Draper) wrote: I'm referring to your original statement that massive particles would experience slowing due to passage through the ether. One would have to quantify the magnitude of the deceleration to know, right? No, you would have to quantify it, since you're the one that stated that it happens. [...] I was not dishonest. No such slowing through a beampipe has been observed, to the precision available, which is pretty darned high. Yes, but without the knowledge of level of deceleration imposed in the 6 µSec you cannot state whether or not the effect is of significance... And regardless of the level at which such a deceleration is not observed, you'll say the same thing. The correct response is that there exists no evidence that such a deceleration occurs nor have you provided a reason that should based upon anything but idle speculation, without even an estimate within +/- X orders of magnitude. By contrast, a theory you would call non-sense, like minimal SU(5), was tested by making a prediction on proton decay to an order of magnitude in 10^30 years. OK, the magnitude of deceleration due to motion through the medium according to LeSagian Theory is [7.05E-14 Sec^-1] times speed v. I.e., A = [7.05E-14]v Thus dv = At = 1.27E-10 m/sec (assuming v = ~c) and t = 6 µSec... Nope, couldn't see it The number 7.05 x 10^-14 coming from what? However, take the Pioneer spacecraft. In that case its net speed is ~11,800 m/sec thus, A = [7.05E-14]11,800 ~ 8.4E-10 m/sec^2 which is exactly the magnitude observed over the life of its travel. I did not say infinitely high precision, or enough to rule out all values of slowing. If you claim that current experiments are not sensitive enough to measure it, then provide an estimate of the sensitivity needed, or at least provide an expression for the slowing anticipated so that I can design the sensitivity needed to measure that. Just FYI, in this context medium deceleration of massive particles probably cannot be measured. Why not? Particles from distant super nova travel a long way, like about 170,000 ly and began the journey toward earth with a velocity of nearly c. That means the neutrinos should have been slowed to a velocity of about 0.68 times their original velocity, or in other words, the head start they had on the light would have been irrelevant. The neutrinos would have arrived long after the light, rather than 3 hours earlier. |
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