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| Tags: gravitational, help, waves |
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#1
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i have a project on the topic 'Search for the Gravitational Waves'. i
searched the net, but got mainly project reports about them with many formulae. I just want the importance of these waves,what are these waves, what will be consequences if find them,..etc. will u help me in this matter. i got some information from wikipedia.org Thanks in advance |
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#2
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On 24 Oct 2005 10:03:13 -0700, "machu france" wrote:
i have a project on the topic 'Search for the Gravitational Waves'. i searched the net, but got mainly project reports about them with many formulae. I just want the importance of these waves,what are these waves, what will be consequences if find them,..etc. There are at least two different things called "gravity waves", and the term you use means Einstein's speculation about a side effect of gravity. If a meteorologist says "gravity wave", he probably means a restoring wave in the ocean or in the atmosphere after a large event that made unequal pressures. It may be hard to find Einstein's original papers, and he repeatedly back referenced thre or four times. Joe Weber won a $1000 first prize in about 1958 for an essay for "The Gravity Research Foundation", so you might search google for Joe Weber and gravity. And about 10 years ago or more groups in the US and Europe began putting a lot of money into Ligo in the US, sorry I don't remember the other name. As of now, I know of no positive repeatable results, google will give lots of references for Ligo. Joe Fischer |
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#3
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On Mon, 24 Oct 2005 13:03:13 -0400, machu france
wrote: i have a project on the topic 'Search for the Gravitational Waves'. i searched the net, but got mainly project reports about them with many formulae. I just want the importance of these waves,what are these waves, what will be consequences if find them,..etc. will u help me in this matter. i got some information from wikipedia.org Thanks in advance http://wugrav.wustl.edu/people/CMW/index.html Sue... -- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
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#4
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"sue jahn" suzysewnshow wrote in message news
| On Mon, 24 Oct 2005 13:03:13 -0400, machu france | wrote: | | i have a project on the topic 'Search for the Gravitational Waves'. i | searched the net, but got mainly project reports about them with many | formulae. I just want the importance of these waves,what are these | waves, | what will be consequences if find them,..etc. | will u help me in this matter. | i got some information from wikipedia.org | Thanks in advance | | | http://wugrav.wustl.edu/people/CMW/index.html The page cannot be displayed The page you are looking for is currently unavailable. The Web site might be experiencing technical difficulties, or you may need to adjust your browser settings. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Please try the following: a.. Click the Refresh button, or try again later. b.. If you typed the page address in the Address bar, make sure that it is spelled correctly. c.. To check your connection settings, click the Tools menu, and then click Internet Options. On the Connections tab, click Settings. The settings should match those provided by your local area network (LAN) administrator or Internet service provider (ISP). d.. See if your Internet connection settings are being detected. You can set Microsoft Windows to examine your network and automatically discover network connection settings (if your network administrator has enabled this setting). 1.. Click the Tools menu, and then click Internet Options. 2.. On the Connections tab, click LAN Settings. 3.. Select Automatically detect settings, and then click OK. e.. Some sites require 128-bit connection security. Click the Help menu and then click About Internet Explorer to determine what strength security you have installed. f.. If you are trying to reach a secure site, make sure your Security settings can support it. Click the Tools menu, and then click Internet Options. On the Advanced tab, scroll to the Security section and check settings for SSL 2.0, SSL 3.0, TLS 1.0, PCT 1.0. g.. Click the Back button to try another link. Cannot find server or DNS Error Internet Explorer Androcles. | Sue... | | | | -- | Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
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#5
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machu france wrote: i have a project on the topic 'Search for the Gravitational Waves'. i searched the net, but got mainly project reports about them with many formulae. I just want the importance of these waves,what are these waves, what will be consequences if find them,..etc. will u help me in this matter. i got some information from wikipedia.org Thanks in advance xxein: We know that a "gravity" exists, but not much more than that. We can even put up a relationship between observational mass and energy. Other than this relationship, we are clueless. We cannot find 'direct linkage'. To suppose that 'gravity has a wave', so to speak, is like saying we understand the communication between the living and the dead. Gravity exists because there is matter (mass and energy) and an interplay between them in an otherwise inert playing field called space. They are not restricted to chalk lines (like on a sports field), nor by even a magical theory described from within. The existence of matter, of course, means procreation. But physics has enough problems without that consideration. How it deals with that is called a 'singularity' that has no direct or physical meaning in its following context. It is like declaring an infinity, which is not so bad, but it also declares a zero. The first question you should ask is "why should this interplay exist, at all". Physics is not supposed to give mythical reports: but it does give a 'guess' as to relations as we measure them. Nothing more. Even though we can conceive of an infinity, we cannot conceived of our existence being the other than fulfillment of some cause. We therefor declare a god instead of a simple existence. Is that a necessity? |
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#6
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"machu france" wrote in message oups.com... i have a project on the topic 'Search for the Gravitational Waves'. i searched the net, but got mainly project reports about them with many formulae. I just want the importance of these waves,what are these waves, what will be consequences if find them,..etc. will u help me in this matter. i got some information from wikipedia.org Thanks in advance .................................................. .......... To Machu France, You will find a clear definition of a graviton and what causes the gravitational force, in the third of my Selected Papers titled: 'Foundations for Proposed Unified Field Theory' under the subheading of: THE GRAVITATIONAL FORCE. See: http://www2.rideau.net/gaasbeek Enjoy, Len. .................................................. ............ |
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