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I imagine ...the waves grew strong enough to detect 2 seconds before the actual collision took place.
but they had to cheat with the gamma ray pulse!
Hi,My first post here! I was wondering about yesterdays publication about gravity waves and the discovery of the colliding neutron stars. Apparently the light from the collision of the neutron stars arrived 2 seconds after the gravity waves hit us. Why is this? Both are traveling at light speed. What caused the difference? I see many options but I am not clear on which one is the correct one:gravity waves follow a different path than the light light has to travel through intergalactic dust and gas clouds that cause it to go slower light could not escape the first 2 seconds of the cataclysmic event from 2 colliding neutron stars the gravity waves where strong enough to detect before the actual collision probably many more options I did not think about Do gravity waves follow the exact same path as the light? I assume no, since the whole idea of detecting them is based on the longer path the light follows when a big enough gravity wave passes through us. Maybe it is wrong to understand this as a "path" to begin with, since the actual spacetime itself is what is "shaking"...
A big difference between the light and gravitational waves in this scenario is that gravitational waves have been emitted constantly over the course of the neutron star pair's orbit, whereas the light was only emitted during the collision itself. As the pair spiral closer to each other, the gravitational waves grow stronger and stronger. I imagine the reason that we detected the waves before we detected the light was because the waves grew strong enough to detect 2 seconds before the actual collision took place.
That is the gentlest sounding gamma ray burst I have ever heard!
My vote is for: light has to travel through intergalactic dust and gas clouds that cause it to go slower
Gravity is a source of gravity.
Could one also reason that:M is the original mass/energy that created gravity.G is the gravity (curvature) created by M.G carries energy, but the total mass/energy of M + G cannot be greater than the original mass/energy of M, because the energy contained in G does not appear from nowhere.Thus, a statement like "gravity creates gravity" says simply that the relevant equations are non-linear?
Quote from: Bill S on 22/10/2017 01:40:16Could one also reason that:M is the original mass/energy that created gravity.G is the gravity (curvature) created by M.G carries energy, but the total mass/energy of M + G cannot be greater than the original mass/energy of M, because the energy contained in G does not appear from nowhere.Thus, a statement like "gravity creates gravity" says simply that the relevant equations are non-linear? That raises the question, given two separate Masses, M1 and M2. When M1 emits gravity, giving us M1 - G1, and thus giving us space that contains G1 sub m, when that G1 Sub m reaches M2, does M2 absorb any of the G1 sub m from space?
If you are asking if gravitational fields cancel the yes they do. If not then I think you need to clarify what you mean.
If you are asking if gravitational fields cancel the yes they do
Wouldn’t these spectra be converted into the emission spectra of the atoms