The Naked Scientists
  • Login
  • Register
  • Podcasts
      • The Naked Scientists
      • eLife
      • Naked Genetics
      • Naked Astronomy
      • In short
      • Naked Neuroscience
      • Ask! The Naked Scientists
      • Question of the Week
      • Archive
      • Video
      • SUBSCRIBE to our Podcasts
  • Articles
      • Science News
      • Features
      • Interviews
      • Answers to Science Questions
  • Get Naked
      • Donate
      • Do an Experiment
      • Science Forum
      • Ask a Question
  • About
      • Meet the team
      • Our Sponsors
      • Site Map
      • Contact us

User menu

  • Login
  • Register
  • Home
  • Help
  • Search
  • Tags
  • Member Map
  • Recent Topics
  • Login
  • Register
  1. Naked Science Forum
  2. General Science
  3. General Science
  4. Question of the Week - Old Version
« previous next »
  • Print
Pages: 1 ... 18 19 [20] 21 22   Go Down

Question of the Week - Old Version

  • 433 Replies
  • 214329 Views
  • 0 Tags

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Mjhavok

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • 468
  • Activity:
    0%
    • View Profile
    • http://cantmakeadifference.blogspot.com
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #380 on: 04/04/2007 19:50:06 »
Einstein extracted a wave equation from his theory of general relativity that does state that gravity would travel at approximately 186,000 miles a second or "C". To my knowledge though, this hasn't been demonstrated.
Logged
Steven
_______________________________________________________________
In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
 



Offline lightarrow

  • Naked Science Forum King!
  • ******
  • 4605
  • Activity:
    0%
  • Thanked: 13 times
    • View Profile
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #381 on: 05/04/2007 08:05:52 »
Quote from: Mjhavok on 04/04/2007 19:50:06
Einstein extracted a wave equation from his theory of general relativity that does state that gravity would travel at approximately 186,000 miles a second or "C". To my knowledge though, this hasn't been demonstrated.
Do you mean experimentally? Of course not, since, AFAIK, gravitational waves hasn't been even detected yet.
« Last Edit: 05/04/2007 13:23:56 by lightarrow »
Logged
 

Offline Mjhavok

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • 468
  • Activity:
    0%
    • View Profile
    • http://cantmakeadifference.blogspot.com
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #382 on: 05/04/2007 12:28:11 »
Yes I meant experimentally.
Logged
Steven
_______________________________________________________________
In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
 

lyner

  • Guest
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #383 on: 15/04/2007 16:58:17 »
As a measurement exercise, it is a nightmare. There is so much 'gravitational interference' from every other mass in the universe. The waves are expected to be very small and v e r y  l o w  f r e q u e n c y. If they were easy to spot, we would have seen them already.
If you could get near a large binary star system, orbiting around its centre  of mass,  or a couple of black holes interfering with each other, - better, still , a  supernova in our back yard, you would be in a better position to detect these waves (if, of course, they exist).
The LIGO   (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory) is hoping to detect gravitational waves by tiny amounts of movement between mirrors situated on the Earth and spaced by a few km.  LISA (Laser interferometer space antenna) is planned in the fairly near future, which will detect the relative wobbling of a set of satellites  - spaced by a few million km - as gravitational waves go past.
Nothing to report yet but keep your fingers crossed and avoid slamming doors and general loud behaviour; that realy doesn't help the sensitive equipment.
Logged
 

Offline lightarrow

  • Naked Science Forum King!
  • ******
  • 4605
  • Activity:
    0%
  • Thanked: 13 times
    • View Profile
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #384 on: 16/04/2007 12:24:27 »
Quote from: sophiecentaur on 15/04/2007 16:58:17
[...]
Nothing to report yet but keep your fingers crossed and avoid slamming doors and general loud behaviour; that realy doesn't help the sensitive equipment.
Yes. I have never been able to understand how they can remove the error due to all the tiny earthquakes there are constantly in our planet.
Logged
 



lyner

  • Guest
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #385 on: 18/04/2007 09:39:21 »
There would be some directivity in the sensitivity of the measuring array, presumably. You could avoid Interference from Earth by looking 'tangentially', perhaps, and then pick your moments for measurement when you are not pointing at anything too close and 'noisy'.
That's the technique for radio astronomy, after all, when your telescope is not steerable.
I would like to know the effective 'beamwidth' of the detector; it could be pretty narrow in the case of the LISA system, because of the enormous aperture. LIGO is not that big, however. Just a lot less sensitive, I would guess.
Logged
 

jolly

  • Guest
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #386 on: 28/04/2007 01:51:30 »
Sorry thats a silly question.
Gravity does not have a speed.
What are you really asking? Earth gravity I suppose your talking about. It depends on the mass, different masses are affected differently.
The speed of an object affected by earths gravity?
Gravity itself doesnt have a speed its a force- Not like light which is radiation and has a speed of sorts.
The question makes no sense.
I mean black holes are the strongest gravity zones so are you asking a what speed are you pulled into them? because that again depends on the blackholes size.
Are you asking at what speed you travel around blackholes- our sun travels about 42,000 miles an hour around our milky ways super massive black hole.
But your question is about gravities speed and really it does not have a speed- In my opinion!
Logged
 

Offline Mjhavok

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • 468
  • Activity:
    0%
    • View Profile
    • http://cantmakeadifference.blogspot.com
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #387 on: 28/04/2007 01:57:28 »
If the sun disapeared we wouldn't instantly verge off out of orbit. This means gravity isn't instant. Saying "Sorry thats a silly question" isn't helping the discussion.
Logged
Steven
_______________________________________________________________
In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
 

jolly

  • Guest
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #388 on: 28/04/2007 12:14:55 »
Quote from: Mjhavok on 28/04/2007 01:57:28
If the sun disapeared we wouldn't instantly verge off out of orbit. This means gravity isn't instant. Saying "Sorry thats a silly question" isn't helping the discussion.

How is that exactly- there would be no orbit if the sun disapeared- and you would verge off- actually. Gravity is a constent and therefore always affects things with in it arena- instantly. So what are you asking? If the sun disapeared how quickly will we be influenced by another star? answer is straight away.
Logged
 



Offline Mjhavok

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • 468
  • Activity:
    0%
    • View Profile
    • http://cantmakeadifference.blogspot.com
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #389 on: 28/04/2007 14:02:04 »
Quote from: jolly on 28/04/2007 12:14:55
Quote from: Mjhavok on 28/04/2007 01:57:28
If the sun disapeared we wouldn't instantly verge off out of orbit. This means gravity isn't instant. Saying "Sorry thats a silly question" isn't helping the discussion.

How is that exactly- there would be no orbit if the sun disapeared- and you would verge off- actually. Gravity is a constent and therefore always affects things with in it arena- instantly. So what are you asking? If the sun disapeared how quickly will we be influenced by another star? answer is straight away.

Sorry what I mean to say was "If the sun disapeared we wouldn't instantly verge off out of orbit instanly". It would verge off but not instantly." If you disagree with that you are wrong.
Logged
Steven
_______________________________________________________________
In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
 

jolly

  • Guest
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #390 on: 28/04/2007 16:04:01 »
Hello, if the sun disappeared there would be nothing to orbit.
We would stop and go somewhere else- straight away. All the planets would fly off in the same direction. As the gravity from either the super massive blackhole at the milky ways core or a closer star would pull us in.
What are you getting at that our speed and direction would remain the same for a while after the sun disappeared- that is totally un-true. The secound the sun disappeared the earth and other planets would pull towards the next high gravity source.
So what you planning- Gonna destroy the sun as part of some stupid experiment, to see if your ideas are correct- Thats inteligent.

Even if you did fly off in the same dirrection for a while the gravity from near by stars would have an affect on you and slow you down.
Gravity has no speed- It is intentanious- As its always there.
« Last Edit: 28/04/2007 16:08:45 by jolly »
Logged
 

Offline Mjhavok

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • 468
  • Activity:
    0%
    • View Profile
    • http://cantmakeadifference.blogspot.com
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #391 on: 28/04/2007 16:19:49 »
I disagree.
Logged
Steven
_______________________________________________________________
In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
 

Offline i am bored

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • 927
  • Activity:
    0%
    • View Profile
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #392 on: 28/04/2007 18:19:15 »
Quote from: Mjhavok on 04/04/2007 17:00:29
QUESTION: WHAT IS THE SPEED OF GRAVITY?
  9.8 m/s^2
Logged
if the pen is mightier than the sword then imagine how powerfull the printer is
 



Offline lightarrow

  • Naked Science Forum King!
  • ******
  • 4605
  • Activity:
    0%
  • Thanked: 13 times
    • View Profile
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #393 on: 28/04/2007 19:43:56 »
Quote from: jolly on 28/04/2007 16:04:01
Hello, if the sun disappeared there would be nothing to orbit.
Yes, but when? If the sun moved, clearly orbits should vary as well. Let's say that the sun suddenly moves at 00:00. When will the planets feel this variation? Not immediately, because that "information" cannot travel faster than light's speed. According to Einstein's general relativity, it travels exactly at light's speed, indeed.
Logged
 

jolly

  • Guest
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #394 on: 29/04/2007 11:57:09 »
Quote from: lightarrow on 28/04/2007 19:43:56
Yes, but when? If the sun moved, clearly orbits should vary as well.

The sun is always moving around the milkly way at about 42,000 mph. and the orbits are affected to a degree.

Quote from: lightarrow on 28/04/2007 19:43:56
Let's say that the sun suddenly moves at 00:00.
So what are you saying 'lets say the sun just stopped moving'- Not gonna happen thats impossible.

Quote from: lightarrow on 28/04/2007 19:43:56
When will the planets feel this variation? Not immediately, because that "information" cannot travel faster than light's speed. According to Einstein's general relativity, it travels exactly at light's speed, indeed.
Right the affects of the super massive black hole at the center of the milkly way are felt throughtout our galaxcy- and beyond, as the next closest galaxcy is currently pulling towards us.
Gravity is a constent- in other words it is just there- immediate- It may when first forming have taken a while to spread out to where it is now- but as it is now, it is just there.
We are all caught with-in gravity; and the affect of gravity- will be instentaniuos as a result. Gravity is nothing like light. Once in position- its there- and as a result you will feel the affects straight away.
Kinda like a spiders web.
Light is radiation- Gravity is a force, Gravity once it has formed this spiders web- ergo, the area of its influence. will affect the things with-in its grasp straight away- and under those circumstances it has no speed it will be felt straight away.


:-Because that "information" cannot travel faster than light

Since when is matter- information.
« Last Edit: 29/04/2007 12:07:11 by jolly »
Logged
 

Offline rosy

  • Naked Science Forum King!
  • ******
  • 1015
  • Activity:
    0%
  • Thanked: 1 times
  • Chemistry
    • View Profile
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #395 on: 29/04/2007 12:29:01 »
Nic- the "speed of gravity" being discussed here is the speed at which the effect of gravity propagates through space. It has been suggested (derived from the maths) that this occurs at the speed of light (3x108 ms-1), but this hasn't been experimentally demonstrated (even assuming it's true this would be unsurprising since the experiments are a total nightmare due to the amount of competition from noise).
9.8 ms-2 is the rate of acceleration due to gravity at the earth's surface, but the magnitude of that is due to the mass of the earth. On the moon it's about 1/6 of that value.
Logged
 

another_someone

  • Guest
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #396 on: 29/04/2007 15:43:06 »
Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
Gravity is a constent- in other words it is just there- immediate-

Constant and immediate are not the same thing (a DC current in a wire is constant, but it still has a speed through the wire).

Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
It may when first forming have taken a while to spread out to where it is now- but as it is now, it is just there.

But if you accept that it took a while to spread out, then it must follow that its absence will also take a while to spread out, otherwise you have an inconsistency in your physics (if the effects of the Sun's gravity were to take 8 minutes to reach the Earth when it was first formed, but instantly disappears when the Sun disappears, then the Earth will have experienced the gravity of the Sun for 8 minutes less than the Sun was actually producing gravity - thus if there is a time lag in the effect of an increase of gravity, then there should be a similar time lag in it diminishing).

Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
Light is radiation- Gravity is a force

The difference is not as much as you indicate.

Light is merely a manifestation of the coulomb force (i.e. the force of an electric field).  We perceive light as a wave because of the finite speed at which the coulomb force travels, and the effects of General Relativity upon the coulomb force emanating from a moving electrically charged particle (as one would have from the electrons moving in a piece of wire under the effect of an electric voltage applied to the wire).

Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
:-Because that "information" cannot travel faster than light

Since when is matter- information.

Gravity does carry information, just as an electric field carries information.

If you are sitting on a beach, with no view of the sky, you may nonetheless observe the ebb and flow of the tide, and from that deduce information about the position of the moon.  In that case, the information is not very precise, but it is information, and it is information that is solely transmitted by the gravitational pull of the moon upon the oceans.  Thus, if gravity was instantaneous, then this information would be received by us instantaneously.
« Last Edit: 29/04/2007 16:17:34 by another_someone »
Logged
 



Offline Mjhavok

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • 468
  • Activity:
    0%
    • View Profile
    • http://cantmakeadifference.blogspot.com
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #397 on: 29/04/2007 16:15:15 »
It makes me happy when George answers.
Logged
Steven
_______________________________________________________________
In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
 

jolly

  • Guest
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #398 on: 29/04/2007 22:02:43 »
Quote from: another_someone on 29/04/2007 15:43:06
Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
Gravity is a constent- in other words it is just there- immediate-

Constant and immediate are not the same thing (a DC current in a wire is constant, but it still has a speed through the wire).

That is only true while the electric applience is being used.

Quote from: another_someone on 29/04/2007 15:43:06
Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
Gravity is a constent- in other words it is just there- immediate-
Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
It may when first forming have taken a while to spread out to where it is now- but as it is now, it is just there.

But if you accept that it took a while to spread out, then it must follow that its absence will also take a while to spread out, otherwise you have an inconsistency in your physics

Right yes, it may take a while to reach its full area of influence- but how are you going to find out what that speed is; because you are currently trapped with-in that area of influence- that is not just our sun but also the other stars and the supermassive black hole at our galaxys core. Even if you remove the sun- the others still affect you instantly. In other words it really does not matter how long it took to create it full area of influence- As once formed it will affect everything with-in its area of influence instentaiously.

Quote from: another_someone on 29/04/2007 15:43:06
Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
Gravity is a constent- in other words it is just there- immediate-

Constant and immediate are not the same thing (a DC current in a wire is constant, but it still has a speed through the wire).

Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
It may when first forming have taken a while to spread out to where it is now- but as it is now, it is just there.

If you are sitting on a beach, with no view of the sky, you may nonetheless observe the ebb and flow of the tide, and from that deduce information about the position of the moon.  In that case, the information is not very precise, but it is information, and it is information that is solely transmitted by the gravitational pull of the moon upon the oceans.  Thus, if gravity was instantaneous, then this information would be received by us instantaneously.

O.k you cannot do that the information you talk about is really an effect you see happening as a result of gravities affect on something- But you percieve that; it may be that you think something has been caused by gravity when it has not or that the affect was so small you did'nt notice. Whatever you look at will be affected by all the different gravity sourses around it, which will make the thing you look at, act differently- so until you can identify all of the different gravity sourses and how they affect something inseperation- how can you know.

The trouble here is at the moment you cant- As all the different gravity influences are jumbbled up togther and we do not have the understanding or technology to see them in isolation- any assertion will simply be a best guess.
   
Just because you do not notice an affect does not mean you are not being affected-
e.g the plane thats lost it engine and is flying free- the passengers may not notice that they are glyding.
"honey, the ground is getting very close all a sudden" "stop worrying dear the pilot knows what he's doing" BANG

So as I said before we are under gravities influence and in that situation, its affect will be instentanious- ergo gravity has no speed.

on the creation of a new black hole you could look to see how quickly the things around it are affected- but you would need to add into that equation what other gravities are affecting those things near it as they may speed up or slow the black holes visual affects. 
« Last Edit: 29/04/2007 23:03:20 by jolly »
Logged
 

another_someone

  • Guest
Re: Question of the Week - Old Version
« Reply #399 on: 30/04/2007 03:17:44 »
Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 22:02:43
Quote from: another_someone on 29/04/2007 15:43:06
Constant and immediate are not the same thing (a DC current in a wire is constant, but it still has a speed through the wire).

That is only true while the electric applience is being used.

Nothing to do with appliances - if I connect a wire from the positive terminal of a battery to the negative terminal of the same battery, a DC current will flow along that wire.

Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 22:02:43
Quote from: another_someone on 29/04/2007 15:43:06
Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
Gravity is a constent- in other words it is just there- immediate-
Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 11:57:09
It may when first forming have taken a while to spread out to where it is now- but as it is now, it is just there.

But if you accept that it took a while to spread out, then it must follow that its absence will also take a while to spread out, otherwise you have an inconsistency in your physics

Right yes, it may take a while to reach its full area of influence- but how are you going to find out what that speed is; because you are currently trapped with-in that area of influence-

You don't need to observe its impact upon you (in any event, one cannot judge speed by looking at one location - one must observe at least two locations).  Thus, if you observe the impact of changes in gravity upon two or more other bodies that are separated by a distance, you can tell if a change in gravity effects both objects at the same time, or it effects one object before the other.

Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 22:02:43
In other words it really does not matter how long it took to create it full area of influence- As once formed it will affect everything with-in its area of influence instentaiously.

But you have not explained, if there is a delay in gravity reaching you when it is being 'formed', why that same delay should not exist when the gravity is being destroyed?

In your world, one could get the rather perverse situation where you detect the loss of a  gravitational field before you detect the existence of a gravitational field (because the detection of the creation of the gravitational field took a finite time to reach you, but the collapse of the gravitational field arrived instantaneously).

Quote from: jolly on 29/04/2007 22:02:43
Quote from: another_someone on 29/04/2007 15:43:06
If you are sitting on a beach, with no view of the sky, you may nonetheless observe the ebb and flow of the tide, and from that deduce information about the position of the moon.  In that case, the information is not very precise, but it is information, and it is information that is solely transmitted by the gravitational pull of the moon upon the oceans.  Thus, if gravity was instantaneous, then this information would be received by us instantaneously.

O.k you cannot do that the information you talk about is really an effect you see happening as a result of gravities affect on something- But you percieve that; it may be that you think something has been caused by gravity when it has not or that the affect was so small you did'nt notice. Whatever you look at will be affected by all the different gravity sourses around it, which will make the thing you look at, act differently- so until you can identify all of the different gravity sourses and how they affect something inseperation- how can you know.

The trouble here is at the moment you cant- As all the different gravity influences are jumbbled up togther and we do not have the understanding or technology to see them in isolation- any assertion will simply be a best guess.
   
Just because you do not notice an affect does not mean you are not being affected-
e.g the plane thats lost it engine and is flying free- the passengers may not notice that they are glyding.
"honey, the ground is getting very close all a sudden" "stop worrying dear the pilot knows what he's doing" BANG

So as I said before we are under gravities influence and in that situation, its affect will be instentanious- ergo gravity has no speed.

on the creation of a new black hole you could look to see how quickly the things around it are affected- but you would need to add into that equation what other gravities are affecting those things near it as they may speed up or slow the black holes visual affects. 


If one takes a solipsistic approach, one can never actually prove anything beyond one's own mere existence; but in practical terms, there is overwhelming evidence that the tides are caused predominantly my the pull of the moon upon the Earth.  You are correct that other bodies also have an influence, but the tides are so obviously synchronised to the orbit of the moon, and there is nothing else which is synchronised to the same extent with the ebb and flow of the tides, that I think we can regard it as highly improbable that the dominant force exerted upon the tides emanates from the Moon.
Logged
 



  • Print
Pages: 1 ... 18 19 [20] 21 22   Go Up
« previous next »
Tags:
 

Similar topics (5)

Binary ? or not Binary ?.....that is the question

Started by neilepBoard Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology

Replies: 4
Views: 5098
Last post 14/09/2005 03:23:59
by neilep
Living On The Moon (Moon question 2) et al !

Started by neilepBoard Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology

Replies: 10
Views: 8582
Last post 10/04/2009 12:44:22
by Don_1
A question about dark matter/dark energy

Started by Deltajackal77Board Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology

Replies: 3
Views: 4329
Last post 12/10/2014 14:14:29
by chiralSPO
I'd Like PAIN..in fact...make it a double ? ( a question about Pain)

Started by neilepBoard Physiology & Medicine

Replies: 5
Views: 4868
Last post 15/10/2019 13:27:37
by LucasT
Can you answer my question about "wet dreams" and masturbation please?

Started by SimulatedBoard Physiology & Medicine

Replies: 60
Views: 37082
Last post 03/10/2018 04:37:46
by Monox D. I-Fly
There was an error while thanking
Thanking...
  • SMF 2.0.15 | SMF © 2017, Simple Machines
    Privacy Policy
    SMFAds for Free Forums
  • Naked Science Forum ©

Page created in 0.122 seconds with 77 queries.

  • Podcasts
  • Articles
  • Get Naked
  • About
  • Contact us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe to newsletter
  • We love feedback

Follow us

cambridge_logo_footer.png

©The Naked Scientists® 2000–2017 | The Naked Scientists® and Naked Science® are registered trademarks created by Dr Chris Smith. Information presented on this website is the opinion of the individual contributors and does not reflect the general views of the administrators, editors, moderators, sponsors, Cambridge University or the public at large.