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Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology / Re: What is the speed of gravity?
« on: 06/03/2016 13:26:11 »
I have been following this thread with great interest and whereas I am reluctant to interrupt this discussion by obviously learned people I would like to make these observations. The speed of wave propagation through the mediums we encounter on earth is proportional to the density of the medium. The denser the medium the faster the wave. This works until we get to the very fastest wave speeds electromagnetic fields and light where they propagate through the least dense medium or a medium of no density. This brings me to the reasoning behind my 'crackpot' left field hypothesis that the cosmos may be made up incredibly small inelastic spheres fruit-packed into a matrix. At the risk of sounding 'Boxxy' I now believe the basic posit might be right. If these spheres or beads as I called them only appear real in our world if moved i.e. given a co-ordinate of time, after which they become awake and form matter as we know it, then suddenly a lot of things begin to make sense. If you park the standard model for now (I believe a sensible and suitable structure can be found) as the structure I suggested has some issues which I am working on, then the rest of the hypothesis seems to work very well. A spinning bead provides a gravitational field which propagates to infinity through its un-awaken neighbours in accordance with the inverse square law. It satisfies ,in fact requires time dilation exactly as Einstein's equation and the mass energy equivalence equation drops out. The speed of light is C in any direction as it should be. The photon is now energy travelling as a wave function in the densest material possible only waking up a tiny piece of mass as it goes. It has duality, angular momentum, no axial momentum, spin and will happily go through two slits at a time. It also has a tiny gravitational field that causes gravitational lensing, and if you have enough of them like close to a star it will provide sufficient additional gravity to effect the nearby planet. The matrix itself will provide multiple paths for entanglement and even allow energy to flow outwards instantly negating the need for expansion. Dark matter become a requirement as kilo for kilo energy transfer would supply 2 times 10 to the 40 more gravity than normal astronomical mass, so there would be huge supplies of gravity, probably centred around galaxies which would give rise to the dark matter effect. So the answer to the question would automatically be, gravitational waves which would happily travel through this matrix, would travel at C, whilst gravitational fields would appear instantly. If the sun suddenly disappeared it would not take 8 minutes for the earth to feel it, it would be instant. Now this idea supposes that time is absolute, supports relativity, space is three dimensional and flat and that the wave speed of light and gravity is back in its right place on the graph. At the risk of being considered mad what's not to like?