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The concept of work in classical mechanics is useful in dealing with conservation of energy, since it tells you how you can add or subtract energy from a system, especially a system in a potential. So my question is this: does conservation of energy hold in GR? And if it does or doesn't, could someone explain why or why not? (Just from the fact that gravity isn't treated as a force and that it deals with non-inertial reference frames, I would think you'd run into problems...)
Quote from: lightarrow on 01/02/2010 18:13:08There is something I'm missing. What [does]:-Pair production-electron angular momentum-gravitational time dilationhave to do with the fact the electron would be made of light? When you say the electron is "made of light" I understand that its *inner structure* is light. Have I understood well?Maybe, lightarrow, but those three things together are to do with how gravity works on matter. Of those three things, only pair production is to do with the fact that the electron is made of light. We can't be sure of the structure, but what we can be sure of is that when we make an electron via pair production, we start with a nucleus and a gamma photon. We end up with a nucleus, and an electron, and a positron. The light has gone. Then when we annihilate an electron with a positron, what we get is gamma photons. That's the light back. Nothing else goes in, and nothing else comes out. So what's the electron made of? Light. Nothing else. There's not a lot to understand, the scientific evidence is there, it's cut and dried. But for some strange reason people don't seem to know about it.
There is something I'm missing. What [does]:-Pair production-electron angular momentum-gravitational time dilationhave to do with the fact the electron would be made of light? When you say the electron is "made of light" I understand that its *inner structure* is light. Have I understood well?
This is a bit leading edge and hasn't attracted much publicity yet, but they're all dynamical stress-energy "vortons". See for example Stationary ring solitons in field theory - knots and vortons by Eugene Radu & Mikhail Volkov (Phys.Rept.468:101-151,2008) at http://arxiv.org/abs/0804.1357. A vorton is akin to a vortex. With more energy you can make more complicated vortons. Think of particles with mass as light tied in up knots. Sounds a bit odd I know, but see tying light in knots and note the quote "The study of knotted vortices was initiated by Lord Kelvin back in 1867 in his quest for an explanation of atoms", adds Dennis, who began to study knotted optical vortices with Professor Sir Michael Berry at Bristol University in 2000. "This work opens a new chapter in that history." In a nutshell, the particles with a short lifetime aren't very good knots.
Work can be measured as the change in kinetic energy of a rigid body.
Quote from: Geezer on 04/02/2010 04:31:47Work can be measured as the change in kinetic energy of a rigid body.How do you know that this is valid in GR? It's your definition? It's a postulate? No, it's only a theorem of CM. How do you prove this theorem? When you'll discover this you have the answer to your question.
Farsight I never said "It isn't to do with whether the object is moving as a whole relative to you." How ever did you draw that conclusion?
Note that pair production (wherein a +1022keV photon is used to create an electron and a positron) is most definitely mainstream, so it's perfectly valid to say the electron is made from light, and electrons really do exhibit angular momentum and magnetic moment. This is important for understanding the gravitational potential energy vis-a-vis time dilation.
I hope we can all agree that the electron involves some form of rotational motion.