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Quote from: jeffreyH on 19/02/2015 19:23:02The reason for posting this was the thought that a gravitational field extends to infinity. If the field removes energy from the photon...It doesn't. The ascending photon doesn't lose any energy. In similar vein the descending photon doesn't gain any energy. If you send a 511keV photon into a black hole, the black hole mass increases by 511kev/c². Conservation of energy applies. The descending photon appears to be blueshifted because you and your clocks go slower when you're lower.
The reason for posting this was the thought that a gravitational field extends to infinity. If the field removes energy from the photon...
He then substituted v for c in E = mc^2 so that mv^2 = hv.
Quote from: jeffreyHHe then substituted v for c in E = mc^2 so that mv^2 = hv.Where did you get that from?
So if a constant stream of photons of identical wavelength are generated directly away from a black hole with each photon at a regular interval what will be seen?
If we then station observation points outward at regular intervals along the photon path to measure the wavelength at each point what do you expect the results to be.
All observation points will expect a speed of c which they should record in their local frame. It is the gradual change in wavelength that produce the important data points. The velocity can't change in a vacuum. So why does the wavelength gradually change for different observers at different radial distances?
If you consider the de Broglie equations we can relate frequency to energy, frequency to wavelength etc. You say no energy is lost. Why then the relationship between frequency and energy?
Quote from: jeffreyH on 20/02/2015 00:30:47If you consider the de Broglie equations we can relate frequency to energy, frequency to wavelength etc. You say no energy is lost. Why then the relationship between frequency and energy?The energy doesn't change, and the frequency doesn't change. You and your clocks go slower when you're lower, so you measure the frequency to have changed. But it hasn't changed. You and your clocks changed, not the photon. See post #6 in this thread where PmbPhy said the coordinate speed of the photon will change and Gravitational redshift is only observed when local observers at different positions compare their measurements. The wavelength as measured by Schwarzschild observers remains unchanged.
Quote from: PmbPhy on 20/02/2015 03:27:42Quote from: jeffreyHHe then substituted v for c in E = mc^2 so that mv^2 = hv.Where did you get that from?It wasn't E= mc^2. It was just mc^2 that was changed otherwise the energy equation would be wrong. mv^2 is of course is related to kinetic energy through (1/2)mv^2.The page I read through was http://chemwiki.ucdavis.edu/Physical_Chemistry/Quantum_Mechanics/02._Fundamental_Concepts_of_Quantum_Mechanics/De_Broglie_Wavelength. The point I was making to John was that energy does change for the photon and what the reasons are.
This is by holding the frequency as constant while the coordinate speed changes, yes.
But we live in a universe where local observations should always concur about measurements. 1 metre will still be 1 metre. The speed of light will still be c. 1 second will still be one second. The energy of the photon for local observers is then different.
You can't get round it by looking at it from a 'Schwarzschild observer' perspective.
Quote from: jeffreyH on 20/02/2015 12:40:26This is by holding the frequency as constant while the coordinate speed changes, yes.The frequency is constant. So is the energy. When you send a 511keV photon into a black hole, the black hole mass increases by 511keV/c². Not a gazillion tonnes. Conservation of energy applies. Quote from: jeffreyH on 20/02/2015 12:40:26But we live in a universe where local observations should always concur about measurements. 1 metre will still be 1 metre. The speed of light will still be c. 1 second will still be one second. The energy of the photon for local observers is then different.The photon energy doesn't change. The observers change. It takes work to lift a brick. You have to add energy to it. It's the same for an observer. And once you've lifted the observer up, then because you have added energy to that observer, to him, the photon energy appears to have reduced. Even though it hasn't. You could do the same sort of thing by accelerating observers away from a photon source in gravity-free space. Quote from: jeffreyH on 20/02/2015 12:40:26You can't get round it by looking at it from a 'Schwarzschild observer' perspective.It isn't a matter of getting around it. It's a matter of getting it right.
I think this says it all John.
Gravity is not a force in the Newtonian sense.
It doesn't add energy to a descending photon either, or remove energy from an ascending photon.
Quote from: JohnDuffieldGravity is not a force in the Newtonian sense.Wrong.Quote from: JohnDuffieldIt doesn't add energy to a descending photon either, or remove energy from an ascending photon.Wrong yet again! It's very easy to prove too: Jeff: Please see: http://home.comcast.net/~peter.m.brown/gr/grav_red_shift.htm
That was a very nice link Jeffrey. Succinct and enlightening to how he thought. If you find more links able to compress ideas feel free to share them
arrive at a destination that was 100 ly away when they were emitted