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I am more interested in Penrose's entropy reset between eons in universal evolution.
Quote from: Mike Gale on 21/01/2017 05:19:39Here's a good account of relativistic escape velocity:http://www.mrelativity.net/MBriefs/Relativistic%20Escape%20Velocity%20using%20Special%20Relativity.htmI'm not sure of that site. It seems to be promoting a personal theory stating that relativity is wrong.
Here's a good account of relativistic escape velocity:http://www.mrelativity.net/MBriefs/Relativistic%20Escape%20Velocity%20using%20Special%20Relativity.htm
Yes what John Rennie is saying is that R and r differ. Where R is radial r is an arc divided by 2 pi. The same result is coincidental. This relates to the way the unit circle operates. Which is why I am interested in David Coopers use of trigonometry in relation to relativity.BTW If you see an answer by John Rennie it is worth taking note. I rate him highly.
To relate r to radians read this and note the role of radians per second in the description of a simple harmonic oscillator. This becomes important when moving on to the Kerr metric.https://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/315/Waveshtml/node3.html
Quote from: jeffreyH on 21/01/2017 08:32:22I am more interested in Penrose's entropy reset between eons in universal evolution.I'm not familiar with that, but I seem to have falsely credited Penrose for the snapshot idea. He doesn't talk about it in that video. It must have been someone else. I'll have to dig into my archives to find the lecture I was thinking of. I remember it ended with the lecturer tossing a pile of snapshots on the floor for dramatic effect.
Quote from: Mike Gale on 21/01/2017 16:14:28Quote from: jeffreyH on 21/01/2017 08:32:22I am more interested in Penrose's entropy reset between eons in universal evolution.I'm not familiar with that, but I seem to have falsely credited Penrose for the snapshot idea. He doesn't talk about it in that video. It must have been someone else. I'll have to dig into my archives to find the lecture I was thinking of. I remember it ended with the lecturer tossing a pile of snapshots on the floor for dramatic effect.It was Julian Barbour: //www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ogiQ2E6n0U
Quote from: jeffreyH on 21/01/2017 16:41:38Yes what John Rennie is saying is that R and r differ. Where R is radial r is an arc divided by 2 pi. The same result is coincidental. This relates to the way the unit circle operates. Which is why I am interested in David Coopers use of trigonometry in relation to relativity.BTW If you see an answer by John Rennie it is worth taking note. I rate him highly.I still don't get it. I understand that a radial distance in a local reference frame is different from that measured by an infinitely removed observer, but I thought the coordinates in the SC metric correspond to the distant reference frame, not the local one.Wikipedia defines r as the circumference of a sphere divided by 2π. If I remember my high school geometry, that's just an elaborate way of defining the radius. Is big R the radius in the local reference frame? If so, I don't see why you would use that in the gravitational potential since the local observer is in free fall. If that was not the case, there would have to be another source of energy beyond that which is provided by the gravitating mass and the SC metric does not allow for that.
I disagree. Nothing penetrates the horizon, not even light. The local reference frame is completely decoupled from the external one at the event horizon. From a local point of view at that location, the gravitating mass is infinitely far away.
Okay, I think I get it now after sleeping on it. The idea is to define radius in terms of circumference because the latter is invariant (in Flamm's parabaloid) and the former is not. It's akin to setting G=c=1 to simplify notation...
Cosmological constant or cosmological variable? Wikipedia says "there is no evidence that the vacuum energy does vary, but it may be the case if, for example, the vacuum energy is (even in part) the potential of a scalar field such as the residual inflation (also see quintessence)."
Quote from: Mike Gale on 20/01/2017 03:03:33I disagree. Nothing penetrates the horizon, not even light. The local reference frame is completely decoupled from the external one at the event horizon. From a local point of view at that location, the gravitating mass is infinitely far away.That is quite incorrect. If you were in a space capsule and were falling into a super giant black hole then from your frame of reference you would most certainly pass through the event horizon. This is a well known fact from general relativity. Two great texts to learn about this are Taylor and Wheeler's texty Exploring Black Holes and the book by Kip Thorne (THE black hole expert) Black Holes and Time Warps - Einstein's Outrageous Legacy.Regarding your other assertions where you disagree with what I wrote, please point to a derivation from a good text on GR. Until then I see no point in merely stating that the other person is wrong. Thanks.
The photon leaving the near vicinity of an event horizon is much like an in falling object. It undergoes a positive coordinate acceleration. So things appear to slow down since the light takes a longer time to get to the remote observer. The local observer on the other hand will experience his fall to the singularity in a shorter period of time than they would expect. No magic and no smoke and mirrors. What Susskind says about entropy and the holographic principle is entirely unaffected by this.