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Er, well the second is defined as the interval for a certain number of the atomic events. The number was chosen to line up with more traditional definitions for the second. As you point out, the fundamental "tick" is an electromagnetic event with the atom.
The light output could be delayed in a very variable fashion, but it would have no effect on the frequency of the microwave resonator. The light output is only sampled periodically to make very infrequent and very minute adjustments to the frequency of the microwave resonator. I believe the detector only responds to the number of photons that reach it. I'm not sure how they know to adjust up or down because I would assume that the light output will diminish if the resonator is slow or fast relative to the caesium events.
Being pedantic, you can't really say that the events are happening at a "slower rate", because that seems to suggest that time itself is invariant.
Both spaces are flat Minkowski space and I think we are assuming that the physical laws are the same, as measured locally, at each location and that it would be expected that the gravitational potential is purely relative and has no meaning in absolute terms. Are these correct assumptions to work with?
If, then, the only difference is that space is "stretched" more in one region than the other then this "scaling" must apply to (x,y,x,-ct) equally mustn't it? If not what coordinate transformation would apply?
In SR the basis for the Lorentz transformation is the constancy of c to all observers. Is the only effect of gravitational potential (Φ) that c is a function of Φ and that this would be the basis of any coordinate transformation?
This seems reasonable but is it all consistent with observation or gedanken experiments?
Quote from: Geezer on 24/05/2010 19:37:41Er, well the second is defined as the interval for a certain number of the atomic events. The number was chosen to line up with more traditional definitions for the second. As you point out, the fundamental "tick" is an electromagnetic event with the atom.And if the space is different, the underlying motion associated with this event is slower. It's a spin-flip, the electron is turning over. You can get a feel for this by stretching an eleastic band over your finger and thumb. Stick a pencil in, and turn the pencil over 180 degrees tensioning the elastic, then let go. It vibrates back and forth. Quote from: Geezer on 24/05/2010 19:37:41The light output could be delayed in a very variable fashion, but it would have no effect on the frequency of the microwave resonator. The light output is only sampled periodically to make very infrequent and very minute adjustments to the frequency of the microwave resonator. I believe the detector only responds to the number of photons that reach it. I'm not sure how they know to adjust up or down because I would assume that the light output will diminish if the resonator is slow or fast relative to the caesium events.It makes no odds, electromagnetic phenomena propagate at a slower rate in a region of lower gravitational potential. Quote from: Geezer on 24/05/2010 19:37:41Being pedantic, you can't really say that the events are happening at a "slower rate", because that seems to suggest that time itself is invariant.Things move slower, that's all. When the motion is cyclic like the spin-flip, we call the result an event.
I guess a good question is whether or not a "good" clock (meaning one that measures local time accurately) is in practice any different than measuring time itself. I don't know the answer, but I've been assuming that it isn't.
..In any case, my point was to see whether the approach of the singularity was detectable (before the singularity was reached) from inside the spacetime region that was being "compressed". Having thought about it, I think not.
I mentioned before that it may be increasingly difficult to have a region of approximately flat space approaching such a condition, and this would be detectable. This is analogous to increasing tidal forces when approaching a BH however, a sufficiently huge BH would allow crossing of such a horizon without noticeable tidal forces (i.e. local space is reasonably flat). To take this analogy further, does this mean the gravitational potential has gone negative? I appreciate this would have no meaning to the outside observer any more than the state of anything crossing a BH event horizon.
LOL - it's not really "slower". If we are measuring time by counting atomic events, we always observe the same number of atomic events for a particular amount of time. My point is that we have to be very careful when we use measures that are a function of time.
Quote from: Geezer on 25/05/2010 17:28:11LOL - it's not really "slower". If we are measuring time by counting atomic events, we always observe the same number of atomic events for a particular amount of time. My point is that we have to be very careful when we use measures that are a function of time.It really is slower, Geezer. If you could actually film those atomic events at the different locations then put them up on a split screen, you'd see it. And the definition of the second is the other way round. The number of atomic events defines the second. It increases with reducing gravitational potential because the motion underlying the events is slower. Amrit is right. Time doesn't "run" and it doesn't "pass". When a clock goes slower it's because things move slower. Godel and Einstein really did work this out in 1949.
Quote from: Farsight on 26/05/2010 08:39:49Quote from: Geezer on 25/05/2010 17:28:11LOL - it's not really "slower". If we are measuring time by counting atomic events, we always observe the same number of atomic events for a particular amount of time. My point is that we have to be very careful when we use measures that are a function of time.It really is slower, Geezer. If you could actually film those atomic events at the different locations then put them up on a split screen, you'd see it. And the definition of the second is the other way round. The number of atomic events defines the second. It increases with reducing gravitational potential because the motion underlying the events is slower. Amrit is right. Time doesn't "run" and it doesn't "pass". When a clock goes slower it's because things move slower. Godel and Einstein really did work this out in 1949. OK - I'll admit I'm being pedantic, but I think it's important to precise when we talk about time.I don't think we can really use the terms "slower" or "faster" because speed is a function of time, so there is no difference in speed. There is no "absolute" time, so when you say "slower", I think you really mean that the count of observed events at different locations can differ (assuming we have some method to observe or record those events.)
speed is not function of time, speed is a function of motion that run in space (and not in time)ve measure speed with clocksv = d/tn where tn is a last "tick" of clock.
Quote from: amrit on 26/05/2010 11:34:14speed is not function of time, speed is a function of motion that run in space (and not in time)ve measure speed with clocksv = d/tn where tn is a last "tick" of clock.I disagree. Everything I've ever learned in mainstream physics on the subject says that speed a ratio of change in position to change in time. Classically speaking, speed=dx/dt (dx distance moved in a short time, dt). Do you have a source for your claim?
I disagree. Everything I've ever learned in mainstream physics on the subject says that speed [is] a ratio of change in position to change in time.
Quote from: JP on 26/05/2010 11:46:47Quote from: amrit on 26/05/2010 11:34:14speed is not function of time, speed is a function of motion that run in space (and not in time)ve measure speed with clocksv = d/tn where tn is a last "tick" of clock.I disagree. Everything I've ever learned in mainstream physics on the subject says that speed a ratio of change in position to change in time. Classically speaking, speed=dx/dt (dx distance moved in a short time, dt). Do you have a source for your claim?Yes now we will change this idea as there is no experimental data for it. Nothing happens in time as time is a mind frame through which we experience motion in space.
Quote from: JP on 26/05/2010 11:46:47I disagree. Everything I've ever learned in mainstream physics on the subject says that speed [is] a ratio of change in position to change in time.There no easy way to say this, JP, but it has to be said: everything you've ever learned on the subject is wrong. It sounds awful I know, but look to the evidence. What we actually see is space and motion through it. We don't see time flowing or any travel through time. The motion is through space. So motion gains precedence over time. Time is reduced to a cumulative measure of local motion, such as the motion of light or caesium spin-flips. For a reference, see A World Without Time: The Forgotten Legacy of Godel and Einstein. Godel and Einstein worked it out in 1949: you don't need time to have motion, you need motion to have time. Amrit is right. Shame he's wrong about that photon clock, but hey-ho. Hi amrit!
Quote from: Farsight on 26/05/2010 13:53:20Quote from: JP on 26/05/2010 11:46:47I disagree. Everything I've ever learned in mainstream physics on the subject says that speed [is] a ratio of change in position to change in time.There no easy way to say this, JP, but it has to be said: everything you've ever learned on the subject is wrong. It sounds awful I know, but look to the evidence. What we actually see is space and motion through it. We don't see time flowing or any travel through time. The motion is through space. So motion gains precedence over time. Time is reduced to a cumulative measure of local motion, such as the motion of light or caesium spin-flips. For a reference, see A World Without Time: The Forgotten Legacy of Godel and Einstein. Godel and Einstein worked it out in 1949: you don't need time to have motion, you need motion to have time. Amrit is right. Shame he's wrong about that photon clock, but hey-ho. Hi amrit! I did a bit of poking around to find out what Godel actually did, scientifically. What Godel did, it seems, was to work out solutions to Einstein's field equations that show that an object moving normally through the universe (i.e. on time-like paths) could go back in time. Does this cause problems with physics in our universe? Almost certainly not, since Godel's universes are not our universe. It might have philosophical implications about time being a "special" dimension. At any rate, back to your post. I disagree with the conclusions you're drawing. We certainly don't see "space and motion through it." What we "see" (and how GR describes the universe) is paths in space-time. What we locally define as velocity is a measurement of the slope between the space and time components of that path at any point. Since these paths are geometrical objects, what you can physically measure are distances. From these distances you can derive slopes. Therefore, time is a fundamental quantity (it's a measure of "distance") and speed is a derived quantity (it's a measure of slope, or a ratio of "distances.")Can you provide any scientific evidence to the contrary?