0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Gamma waves from the same event that produced the Gravity wave precede Gravity waves by mere seconds. Gravity waves are said to produce a space/time distortions. Why then are Gamma waves not diminished, when Gravity waves following directly behind a Gamma wave by mere seconds are claimed to have diminished?
Quote from: Pesq on 12/12/2018 15:51:41Gamma waves from the same event that produced the Gravity wave precede Gravity waves by mere seconds. Gravity waves are said to produce a space/time distortions. Why then are Gamma waves not diminished, when Gravity waves following directly behind a Gamma wave by mere seconds are claimed to have diminished?They are gamma rays, not gamma waves, and they are diminished with distance: If you're twice as far from the source of them, you measure 1/4th as many of them.The gravity waves precede the gamma rays by a few seconds, not the other way around.Both travel at light, but the gravity waves are generated before the merger event (like two neutron stars colliding), and the gamma rays during the collision. Also, the gamma rays are light, and might be slowed by traveling through the non-vacuum of the space between.
the gamma waves have not been reduced in frequency
so gamma being EM light travels in a wave. as it travels through space/time it elongates. this elongations, reduces its frequency to a lower frequencies of light. yet we have gravity waves arriving seconds before a gamma waves. the gamma waves have not been reduced in frequency and yet the gravity waves that arrive at basically the same time over millions of light years are claimed to be diminished?
The gamma waves diminished at the same rate as the gravitational waves did, by the square of the distance. What makes you think they didn't?
The magnitude of this effect decreases in proportion to the inverse distance from the source.
neutrinos outrunning photons from a supernova, arriving seconds before the light. This is largely due to the refractive index of the non-empty space surrounding the supernova, something to which the neutrinos are fairly immune.
Nobody has answered the question, if gravity requires mass, what is the mass that holds a gravity wave intact over millions of light years? before answering, consider that science claims that EM light has 0 mass.
researchgate.net/post/Does_EM_waves_have_mass"The photons are a bunch of waves confined in space and have quantized energy. The energy in a photon is proportional to its frequency and equals hf where h is the Planck constant. ... However the rest mass is zero because electromagnetic waves do not exist at rest."
So, the gravity wave arrives first followed 1.7ms behind by a gamma wave from over 1.3 billion light years.