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#11
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On Mar 18, 12:08 am, "Eric Gisse" wrote:
[ii] My personal experience replying Eric Gisse posts recommended avoiding advanced topics. I doubt he has studied QCD. Of course I haven't, and neither have you. Unless you can suddenly demonstrate a superb grasp of quantum mechanics, that is. Therefore my criteria do not citing quark stuff (because suspecting you are ignorant) was correct. I was unaware of the Schwarzschild-de Sitter solution. Therefore my criteria do not citing 'advanced' GR stuff (because suspecting you are ignorant) was correct. For large accellerations MOND is [1 / r^2]. For small accellerations MOND is [1 / r]. Therefore in MOND, interactions are weaker as distance increases. I do not know from where Eric Gisse got the wrong idea that MOND is like an oscillator. Me neither, because I never said that. In the LIGO thread, anadsr said when discussing about MOND with you: I don't understand the god like reverence that GR holds in the minds of Relativists. If things can behave differently at high speeds, why can't they do so at low accelerations. Your reply (Mar 1, 5:25 am) was: Can you name one interaction effect that gets stronger as distance increases? No, please don't argue that gravity is like a harmonic oscillator. It appears clear that you claimed MOND to gets stronger as distance increases (several people interpreted that way) but you can change that now if you prefer. |
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#12
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On Mar 17, 9:05 pm, "Juan R."
wrote:[i] On Mar 17, 5:35 am, wrote: On Mar 10, 11:28 pm, "Juan R." wrote: On Mar 1, 5:25 am, "Eric Gisse" wrote [in reply to ]: Can you name one interaction effect that gets stronger as distance increases? No, please don't argue that gravity is like a harmonic oscillator. InMOND, interactions are weaker as distance increases. Actually force between Quarks increases with distance. That's why they don't exist alone. True, that is quarks confinement. But i did not cited because: It was a bit off-topic. It is not off-topic, if the question was "is there an interaction which increases with distance", because there is an interaction. It doesn't matter if it is microscopic or macroscopic. After all microscopic does affect the macro world. And we know that the microscopic makes up the world. [ii] My personal experience replying Eric Gisse posts recommended avoiding advanced topics. I doubt he has studied QCD. I wouldn't know about that. But when we are talking about the failures of GR, then Quantum Theory definitely comes into the picture because it is GR's biggest failure. Some may say that it is QCD's failure but I doubt many will see it that way. It is definite that GR will be found in the limit of a Quantum Theory of Gravity, rather than QCD to be found in the limit of GR ;-). So we start with the statement that GR is true in a limit of a Quantum Theory of Gravity, which means that GR is not the true picture. So I don't know why Relativists find it so difficult to come to terms with the fact that MOND works and proves that the Limit of GR is a few kilo parsecs. Although Pioneer may mean that something is wrong there too. But Pioneer seems to be a fluke rather than an indication of something wrong. regards, -anandsr |
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#13
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On Mar 19, 12:56 am, wrote:[i]
On Mar 17, 9:05 pm, "Juan R." wrote: On Mar 17, 5:35 am, wrote: On Mar 10, 11:28 pm, "Juan R." wrote: On Mar 1, 5:25 am, "EricGisse" wrote [in reply to ]: Can you name one interaction effect that gets stronger as distance increases? No, please don't argue that gravity is like a harmonic oscillator. InMOND, interactions are weaker as distance increases. Actually force between Quarks increases with distance. That's why they don't exist alone. True, that is quarks confinement. But i did not cited because: It was a bit off-topic. It is not off-topic, if the question was "is there an interaction which increases with distance", because there is an interaction. It doesn't matter if it is microscopic or macroscopic. After all microscopic does affect the macro world. And we know that the microscopic makes up the world. I should have been more clear. I knew about quark confinement, I just expected a shade more thought to be given to the subject than was actually given. "microscopic" is still a half dozen orders of magnitude too large for the strong force interactions. Strong force interactions are of the femtometer range - and DO NOT EXIST outside it because the strong force mediating particle [whatever the **** it is] is massive. What I *meant* was name one verified macroscopic interaction which _increases_ with distance with emphasis on both _verified_ and _macroscopic_. [ii] My personal experience replying EricGisseposts recommended avoiding advanced topics. I doubt he has studied QCD. I wouldn't know about that. But when we are talking about the failures of GR, then Quantum Theory definitely comes into the picture because it is GR's biggest failure. Some may say that it is QCD's failure but I doubt many will see it that way. It is definite that GR will be found in the limit of a Quantum Theory of Gravity, rather than QCD to be found in the limit of GR ;-). I think it is premature to worry about GR being the limiting case of anything because we haven't truly found it to be failing. I know your position on dark matter and you know mine. That aside, it must break down _somewhere_ but we haven't actually seen it happen yet. So we start with the statement that GR is true in a limit of a Quantum Theory of Gravity, which means that GR is not the true picture. So I don't know why Relativists find it so difficult to come to terms with the fact that MOND works and proves that the Limit of GR is a few kilo parsecs. Although Pioneer may mean that something is wrong there too. But Pioneer seems to be a fluke rather than an indication of something wrong. My money is on outgassing and/or asymmetric RTG heat reflection. MOND working, for suitable definitions of working, does not prove anything other than MOND is a halfway decent model under certain conditions. regards, -anandsr |
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#14
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On Mar 20, 8:42 am, "Eric Gisse" wrote:
On Mar 19, 12:56 am, wrote: On Mar 17, 9:05 pm, "Juan R." wrote: On Mar 17, 5:35 am, wrote: On Mar 10, 11:28 pm, "Juan R." wrote: It is not off-topic, if the question was "is there an interaction which increases with distance", because there is an interaction. It doesn't matter if it is microscopic or macroscopic. After all microscopic does affect the macro world. And we know that the microscopic makes up the world. I should have been more clear. I knew about quark confinement, I just expected a shade more thought to be given to the subject than was actually given. "microscopic" is still a half dozen orders of magnitude too large for the strong force interactions. Strong force interactions are of the femtometer range - and DO NOT EXIST outside it because the strong force mediating particle [whatever the **** it is] is massive. What I *meant* was name one verified macroscopic interaction which _increases_ with distance with emphasis on both _verified_ and _macroscopic_. But when there are only four known interactions, if even one of them increases with distance, why would you want to neglect that. Also QED (the Electro Magnetic interaction) also has a weird interaction, called entanglement that does weird things even at a huge distance, and instantly without coming into conflict with superluminal expectations. I guess that is very macroscopic, and it very much conflicts with GR. But you can chose to ignore that, saying that some GR expectations like causality are not broken. I know that you actually mean only the gravitational interaction, but in my opinion GR is already broken. I think the accelerated expansion of the universe is due to repulsive force of gravitation, and that will have to occur only if it increases with gravity. Its all speculation, but you know that we don't have the quantum theory of gravity. [ii] My personal experience replying EricGisseposts recommended avoiding advanced topics. I doubt he has studied QCD. I wouldn't know about that. But when we are talking about the failures of GR, then Quantum Theory definitely comes into the picture because it is GR's biggest failure. Some may say that it is QCD's failure but I doubt many will see it that way. It is definite that GR will be found in the limit of a Quantum Theory of Gravity, rather than QCD to be found in the limit of GR ;-). I think it is premature to worry about GR being the limiting case of anything because we haven't truly found it to be failing. I know your position on dark matter and you know mine. That aside, it must break down _somewhere_ but we haven't actually seen it happen yet. GR has broken down and miserably. But you are turning a blind eye to it. MOND is the indicator. You chose to ignore MOND because you cannot explain it. If you could you would have done so. But it is a fact that GR+DM cannot explain MOND LAW. It is not possible to explain such a tight correlation between the Mass Discrepancies and the observed accelerations. If you have a theory you can do so. Nobody has done that till now. And nobody who has measured the closeness of the correlation will believe that it can be done. You will again say that I am ignoring weak lensing. But I will say what's so different about weak lensing, it also shows Mass Discrepancy which is also an indication that GR has broken down, we are again seeing Mass Discrepancies. Then you will say WMAP, again the same Mass Discrepancy. Of course all these mean that there is something wrong with GR, but you think that you are seeing different confirmation of Dark Matter while the reason for all the Mass Discrepancy, is the same. GR does not work in weak gravity regimes. To you it doesn't matter that the Mass Discrepancy is increasing with the scale. At the Galaxy level it depends on the size and density (basically the weakness of gravity), at the cluster level it is 10 times. At the Cosmic level it is 100 times. But you will see all these similar failings as confirmation of Dark Matter. You will also ignore the only thing that can open your mind. Because it is so much more easy to live with the status quo. You don't want to face the possibility that we don't know any theory that can account for weak gravity regimes. This is actually a great time for theoretical physicists to try and find the correct theory, and quite a few are working towards them, and I am not talking about crackpots. Search for papers on TeVeS, Conformal Loop Quantum Gravity, AdS/CFT gravity. But it is a difficult thing to do, you have to be great at mathematics. These theories are much more difficult to work with mathematically than GR. Why don't you study MOND results. The MOND people cannot be pulling numbers out of thin air. You can test them out. You can try to make a model of DM that will fit MOND. But you won't do that, you will simply ignore all the evidence, because that's the easy thing to do. So we start with the statement that GR is true in a limit of a Quantum Theory of Gravity, which means that GR is not the true picture. So I don't know why Relativists find it so difficult to come to terms with the fact thatMONDworks and proves that the Limit of GR is a few kilo parsecs. Although Pioneer may mean that something is wrong there too. But Pioneer seems to be a fluke rather than an indication of something wrong. My money is on outgassing and/or asymmetric RTG heat reflection. MONDworking, for suitable definitions of working, does not prove anything other thanMONDis a halfway decent model under certain conditions. I beg to differ here. MOND is not a "halfway decent model", as a model it is pathetic. It is simply a law, just like Kepler's Laws, that for some underlying reason works well on the galaxy scales. We need somebody like Newton or Einstein to explain MOND, just like Newton explained Kepler's laws and Einstein explained precession of Mercury. I guess they had it easier, because there was no scientific establishment to fight with. http://www.astro.umd.edu/~ssm/mond/d...ellletter.html The above is a letter that gives 8 reasons why CDM should be considered falsified within Galaxy limits. The above also links to an interesting paper. In the initial version, it concluded that DM+GR cannot explain the correlation. But by the time it got published the conclusion had changed a lot. I guess the referee convinced them of the utility of not ignoring DM in any case ;-). This is a case where the establishment does prevent publishing of unbiased papers. http://www.citebase.org/abstract?id=...o-ph%2F0403206 (Cores of Dark Matter Halos Correlate with Disk Scale Lengths) I don't know what you mean exactly by "suitable definitions of working", but MOND works very well without any exceptions on the scale of galaxies. In 80% of galaxies it gives very good fits, for the rest of the 20%, it is known that there are problems with the data. And the important thing is that it cannot fit those 20%, as would be expected for a theory with no free parameters, a0 is no longer free. Another important thing is that DM models can fit those 20% cases also to the same degree of accuracy as the other 80%, because of the large number of free parameters. The onus is on theoretical physicists to find the underlying reason. Ignoring MOND does not help. regards, -anandsr |
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#15
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Yes, indeed! .... However, as along that matter, very little would be possible to activate anything along that matter as especially, along any nonlinearity neither, whether it would be an equation along the geometry, which it would be as follows, for instance : y = r ( x - x² ) Therefore, as along which, every value of x produces a value of y, and the resulting curve as would show the relation of the two numbers along a range of a values. However, along that matter, if x would be small, then y woold be small too, but larger than x, and the curve would be rising steeply, and if x would be along the middle of the range, then y would be large, but those levels would falls, so that if x would be large, then y would be small again. Therefore, and that is what would produce any modeling along any growth, whether, as to solve a system of nonlinear differential equations, is almost an impossible matter, due to their flows and oscillations along that matter all along, and this is what is all about, a definitely as a matter a fact. -- Ahmed Ouahi, Architect Best Regards! wrote in message oups.com... On Mar 20, 8:42 am, "Eric Gisse" wrote: On Mar 19, 12:56 am, wrote: On Mar 17, 9:05 pm, "Juan R." wrote: On Mar 17, 5:35 am, wrote: On Mar 10, 11:28 pm, "Juan R." wrote: It is not off-topic, if the question was "is there an interaction which increases with distance", because there is an interaction. It doesn't matter if it is microscopic or macroscopic. After all microscopic does affect the macro world. And we know that the microscopic makes up the world. I should have been more clear. I knew about quark confinement, I just expected a shade more thought to be given to the subject than was actually given. "microscopic" is still a half dozen orders of magnitude too large for the strong force interactions. Strong force interactions are of the femtometer range - and DO NOT EXIST outside it because the strong force mediating particle [whatever the **** it is] is massive. What I *meant* was name one verified macroscopic interaction which _increases_ with distance with emphasis on both _verified_ and _macroscopic_. But when there are only four known interactions, if even one of them increases with distance, why would you want to neglect that. Also QED (the Electro Magnetic interaction) also has a weird interaction, called entanglement that does weird things even at a huge distance, and instantly without coming into conflict with superluminal expectations. I guess that is very macroscopic, and it very much conflicts with GR. But you can chose to ignore that, saying that some GR expectations like causality are not broken. I know that you actually mean only the gravitational interaction, but in my opinion GR is already broken. I think the accelerated expansion of the universe is due to repulsive force of gravitation, and that will have to occur only if it increases with gravity. Its all speculation, but you know that we don't have the quantum theory of gravity. [ii] My personal experience replying EricGisseposts recommended avoiding advanced topics. I doubt he has studied QCD. I wouldn't know about that. But when we are talking about the failures of GR, then Quantum Theory definitely comes into the picture because it is GR's biggest failure. Some may say that it is QCD's failure but I doubt many will see it that way. It is definite that GR will be found in the limit of a Quantum Theory of Gravity, rather than QCD to be found in the limit of GR ;-). I think it is premature to worry about GR being the limiting case of anything because we haven't truly found it to be failing. I know your position on dark matter and you know mine. That aside, it must break down _somewhere_ but we haven't actually seen it happen yet. GR has broken down and miserably. But you are turning a blind eye to it. MOND is the indicator. You chose to ignore MOND because you cannot explain it. If you could you would have done so. But it is a fact that GR+DM cannot explain MOND LAW. It is not possible to explain such a tight correlation between the Mass Discrepancies and the observed accelerations. If you have a theory you can do so. Nobody has done that till now. And nobody who has measured the closeness of the correlation will believe that it can be done. You will again say that I am ignoring weak lensing. But I will say what's so different about weak lensing, it also shows Mass Discrepancy which is also an indication that GR has broken down, we are again seeing Mass Discrepancies. Then you will say WMAP, again the same Mass Discrepancy. Of course all these mean that there is something wrong with GR, but you think that you are seeing different confirmation of Dark Matter while the reason for all the Mass Discrepancy, is the same. GR does not work in weak gravity regimes. To you it doesn't matter that the Mass Discrepancy is increasing with the scale. At the Galaxy level it depends on the size and density (basically the weakness of gravity), at the cluster level it is 10 times. At the Cosmic level it is 100 times. But you will see all these similar failings as confirmation of Dark Matter. You will also ignore the only thing that can open your mind. Because it is so much more easy to live with the status quo. You don't want to face the possibility that we don't know any theory that can account for weak gravity regimes. This is actually a great time for theoretical physicists to try and find the correct theory, and quite a few are working towards them, and I am not talking about crackpots. Search for papers on TeVeS, Conformal Loop Quantum Gravity, AdS/CFT gravity. But it is a difficult thing to do, you have to be great at mathematics. These theories are much more difficult to work with mathematically than GR. Why don't you study MOND results. The MOND people cannot be pulling numbers out of thin air. You can test them out. You can try to make a model of DM that will fit MOND. But you won't do that, you will simply ignore all the evidence, because that's the easy thing to do. So we start with the statement that GR is true in a limit of a Quantum Theory of Gravity, which means that GR is not the true picture. So I don't know why Relativists find it so difficult to come to terms with the fact thatMONDworks and proves that the Limit of GR is a few kilo parsecs. Although Pioneer may mean that something is wrong there too. But Pioneer seems to be a fluke rather than an indication of something wrong. My money is on outgassing and/or asymmetric RTG heat reflection. MONDworking, for suitable definitions of working, does not prove anything other thanMONDis a halfway decent model under certain conditions. I beg to differ here. MOND is not a "halfway decent model", as a model it is pathetic. It is simply a law, just like Kepler's Laws, that for some underlying reason works well on the galaxy scales. We need somebody like Newton or Einstein to explain MOND, just like Newton explained Kepler's laws and Einstein explained precession of Mercury. I guess they had it easier, because there was no scientific establishment to fight with. http://www.astro.umd.edu/~ssm/mond/d...ellletter.html The above is a letter that gives 8 reasons why CDM should be considered falsified within Galaxy limits. The above also links to an interesting paper. In the initial version, it concluded that DM+GR cannot explain the correlation. But by the time it got published the conclusion had changed a lot. I guess the referee convinced them of the utility of not ignoring DM in any case ;-). This is a case where the establishment does prevent publishing of unbiased papers. http://www.citebase.org/abstract?id=...o-ph%2F0403206 (Cores of Dark Matter Halos Correlate with Disk Scale Lengths) I don't know what you mean exactly by "suitable definitions of working", but MOND works very well without any exceptions on the scale of galaxies. In 80% of galaxies it gives very good fits, for the rest of the 20%, it is known that there are problems with the data. And the important thing is that it cannot fit those 20%, as would be expected for a theory with no free parameters, a0 is no longer free. Another important thing is that DM models can fit those 20% cases also to the same degree of accuracy as the other 80%, because of the large number of free parameters. The onus is on theoretical physicists to find the underlying reason. Ignoring MOND does not help. regards, -anandsr |
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#17
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On Mar 20, 12:25 am, "Ahmed Ouahi, Architect"
wrote: [...] I think it is time to, once again, ask you why you even bother posting on this newsgroup when you have no grasp of physics at any level. |
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#18
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It would be this, that it could makes you to feel better, or the pain is somewhere else!? -- Ahmed Ouahi, Architect Think About That! "Eric Gisse" wrote in message oups.com... On Mar 20, 12:25 am, "Ahmed Ouahi, Architect" wrote: [...] I think it is time to, once again, ask you why you even bother posting on this newsgroup when you have no grasp of physics at any level. |
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#19
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On Mar 20, 12:43 am, "Ahmed Ouahi, Architect"
wrote: It would be this, that it could makes you to feel better, or the pain is somewhere else!? Quiet, top-posting nutter. -- Ahmed Ouahi, Architect Think About That! "EricGisse" wrote in message oups.com... On Mar 20, 12:25 am, "Ahmed Ouahi, Architect" wrote: [...] I think it is time to, once again, ask you why you even bother posting on this newsgroup when you have no grasp of physics at any level. |
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#20
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One way or an other, you do have an infinite empty space, due to your own emptiness, the reason, that you are an empty from upstairs, as along your case, that is a simply what is all about. -- Ahmed Ouahi, Architect Think About That! "Eric Gisse" wrote in message oups.com... On Mar 20, 12:43 am, "Ahmed Ouahi, Architect" wrote: It would be this, that it could makes you to feel better, or the pain is somewhere else!? Quiet, top-posting nutter. -- Ahmed Ouahi, Architect Think About That! "EricGisse" wrote in message oups.com... On Mar 20, 12:25 am, "Ahmed Ouahi, Architect" wrote: [...] I think it is time to, once again, ask you why you even bother posting on this newsgroup when you have no grasp of physics at any level. |
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