0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Yes in fact it is completely wrong. At the moment I am dealing with lots of stuff so I am not entirely concentrating properly. We currently have no kitchen and chaos reigns. Builders don't appreciate the disruption they cause. My apologies.
Thanks Mike: I haven't published my diagram online, but if it became of interest for you to see it as you further digest, I can pm it to you.
So in a model of variable speeds for light - which presumably you are placing within a model that is expanding under Hubble's velocity related interpretation of the red shift distance correlation - are you still rendering the measure of a non local metre as variable, as well as non local time being variable?I'll give the YouTube a go, but find that Susskind's 'theoretical minimum' GR lectures are pretty accessible, and Einstein himself isn't exactly incomprehensible, nor any of the prominent physicists, (who's many books I've read), giving too shabby a description either...
The old metric switches the time dimension for a space dimension in its approach to a black hole.You, (I think I have interpreted correctly), are saying that the new metric doesn't need to do this, and you suggest changing from the old to the new when moving out of the weak approximation field, of which I can see the advantages, but still remain concerned regarding the fact that if a second and a metre are variables, if one is considering variable speeds for light, what exactly does one hold 'anything' relative to?But to further analyse what is actually physically occurring for black holes, does it not bother you at-all concerning the second law of thermodynamics, and the conservation of energy law reversal of 'usual' physics with regards to black holes?
I truly love Feynman and his intellectual acrobatics coupled with his top sense of humour!The Feynman Lectures are a blast!
But you are aware that SR uses absolute time, and relates motion directly back to the standard second via the speed of light?
Yes - but what SR starts out with as a baseline is invariant time which all SR variable time is held relative to, and SR's use of the speed of light is held relative to a standard second.