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It's no coincidence. The thing is, GR doesn't actually explain why matter falls down. It doesn't actually say why an object acquires some given speed, which is escape velocity when you flip things round. However it's very easy to understand if you think about the wave nature of matter and stuff electron diffraction and spin. Just simplify the electron to light going round and round, then simplify it further to light going round a square path. The horizontals bend in the gravitational gradient, and the electron falls down. It's similar if you accelerate the electron in gravity-free space. Sadly you never seem to see any texts which combine relativity with the wave nature of matter.
That's a useful way of looking at things. Where do you get your knowledge from, because I'd like to explore the source.
Last night I watch the Horizon programme on the BBC about the search for the gravitational waves from the big bang. Alan Guth was one of the physicists included. He propose the theory of inflation right at the start of his career. Finding those waves will tell us a lot more about the big bang and validate Alan's theory. The guys set up telescopes at the pole and spent 3 years recording CMBR from a dark spot in the sky. Then after 3 years they found the data wasn't accurate enough. They then went away and built a better telescope and spent several more years looking for the b mode signal of the early gravitational waves. They found something that looked like the signal and spent more time analyzing it and ruling things out until they were confident in announcing it. Then it was shown that at least 50% of it and maybe 100% of the signal was due to dust. That is physics.
Jeffrey: David Simmons-Duffin was being overly hostile. Take a look at the picture on the quora page. Then note that the Dirac spinor is a bispinor, and have a look at Dirac's belt on Mathspages:"In contrast, the Mobius strip is a non-orientable surface, because a right-handed figure, moved continuously around the loop until arrive back at its starting point, becomes left-handed. An object must be translated around the loop twice in order to be restored to its original position and chirality. In this sense a Mobius strip is reminiscent of spin-1/2 particles in quantum mechanics, since such particles must be rotated through two complete rotations in order to be restored to their original state... I'm John Duffield. I don't know any Stuart J Duffield. I'm not claiming to be an authority on spinors or group theory, I'm just telling you about things that aren't in the popscience/student books/articles/etc you've been reading. Do not think that something is "spurious information" or isn't "established physics" just because you don't know about it. The vast bulk of what I tell you about is established physics. I didn't invent the word spinor, and I didn't write the Wikipedia article or put this picture on it: QuoteLast night I watch the Horizon programme on the BBC about the search for the gravitational waves from the big bang. Alan Guth was one of the physicists included. He propose the theory of inflation right at the start of his career. Finding those waves will tell us a lot more about the big bang and validate Alan's theory. The guys set up telescopes at the pole and spent 3 years recording CMBR from a dark spot in the sky. Then after 3 years they found the data wasn't accurate enough. They then went away and built a better telescope and spent several more years looking for the b mode signal of the early gravitational waves. They found something that looked like the signal and spent more time analyzing it and ruling things out until they were confident in announcing it. Then it was shown that at least 50% of it and maybe 100% of the signal was due to dust. That is physics.The Horizon producers pulled their punches, and didn't say anything about the orchestrated hype that put people's back up. See Physicist Paul Steinhardt Slams Inflation, Cosmic Theory He Helped Conceive. And note this: that "first light" dates from 300,000 years after the big bang. How can that tell you anything about the first nanosecond after the big bang? The universe was a seething maelstrom of plasma for a third of a million years. It would be like putting those sonic standing waves into a blender.
Quote from: Bill S on 10/03/2015 00:53:33Quote from: EthosWe are all familiar with the escape velocity of a black hole as being equal to c. If that were the case, wouldn't light escape?Yes of course...........I should have said "escape velocity greater than c." But greater by only the smallest degree.
Quote from: EthosWe are all familiar with the escape velocity of a black hole as being equal to c. If that were the case, wouldn't light escape?
We are all familiar with the escape velocity of a black hole as being equal to c.
Quote from: Ethos_ on 10/03/2015 01:05:43Quote from: Bill S on 10/03/2015 00:53:33Quote from: EthosWe are all familiar with the escape velocity of a black hole as being equal to c. If that were the case, wouldn't light escape?Yes of course...........I should have said "escape velocity greater than c." But greater by only the smallest degree.Would't escape velocity be proportional to the mass of the black hole, in other words; A very small black hole being very close to c but a super massive black hole very much great than c?If not, why?