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But is the cat dead or alive?
Quote from: jeffreyH on 16/03/2019 00:55:01But is the cat dead or alive?To summarise quantum physics in one word, "yes".
I understand that an "event" is used to mean a point on a spacetime coordinate system or it can be one element of the set of aĺl events (which doesn't help).But if we take an event as a physical oçcurence , what can we say about it?...
Quote from: geordief on 15/03/2019 02:51:32I understand that an "event" is used to mean a point on a spacetime coordinate system or it can be one element of the set of aĺl events (which doesn't help).But if we take an event as a physical oçcurence , what can we say about it?...It is something which has a spatial point location at an instant of time. Events are pretty much fictional in practice on a large scale because real objects are not point objects and have spatial extent. They apply more aptly in particle physics. This does not mean that events don't occur and can't be described on the large scale though. They're approximations in that case like a circle is not exactly what the top of a tuna can is.
An event is definitely something that happens in a region of space and time,
The inflationary stage preceding the Big Bang was an event, ..
I am not so sure a tin of tuna can be described as an event ..
The inflationary stage preceding the Big Bang was an event, that covered a period of time whereby particles came into existence, before resulting in a hot big bang and the slowing of the inflationary stage, which is now accelerating as g >0.
I am not so sure a tin of tuna can be described as an event
I don't think any cosmologist would refer to the inflationary stage (which followed the big bang) an event. It is an epoch, which implies a significant period of time. It is no more an event than is the Holocene epoch which is currently ending. And while the inflation epoch was certainly of shorter duration than the Holocene, it represented a far greater percentage of the entirety of the history of time while it was going on.
Quote from: flummoxed on 17/03/2019 18:09:45An event is definitely something that happens in a region of space and time, That's not how the term event is defined. An event is a point in space at an instant in time, i.e. = (t, x, y, z) is an event.Quote from: flummoxed on 17/03/2019 18:09:45The inflationary stage preceding the Big Bang was an event, ..Wrong. Please read the definition of event at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_(relativity)
Quote from: PmbPhy on 17/03/2019 22:17:30Quote from: flummoxed on 17/03/2019 18:09:45An event is definitely something that happens in a region of space and time, That's not how the term event is defined. An event is a point in space at an instant in time, i.e. = (t, x, y, z) is an event.Quote from: flummoxed on 17/03/2019 18:09:45The inflationary stage preceding the Big Bang was an event, ..Wrong. Please read the definition of event at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_(relativity)Correct link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_(relativity)From your link "an event is the instantaneous physical situation or occurrence associated with a point in spacetime"From the oxford English dictionary an event in physics is "1.3Physics A single occurrence of a process, e.g. the ionization of one atom.Example sentencesThe aim of induction is to find series of events whose frequency of occurrence converges toward a limit.Consider our passage through time as riding the shockwave of the bang event.In the lower graph the current scale is amplified so that single channel events can be distinguished. "The Big Bang according to the oxford English dictionary was an event https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/event
Do you have a reference for your comment above. The term Big Bang is term which seems to have evolved since Hoyle coined the phrase and means a lot to different people. In particular I am interested in reference to the time duration of the inflationary stage ie what do you mean by Significant time
Spacetime is a four-dimensional set, with elements labeled by three dimensional of space and one of time....A point in spacetime is called an event.
Quote from: Halc on 17/03/2019 23:14:31I don't think any cosmologist would refer to the inflationary stage (which followed the big bang) an event... And while the inflation epoch was certainly of shorter duration than the Holocene, it represented a far greater percentage of the entirety of the history of time while it was going on.This is of thread, but I may start a thread to discuss this.Under that model, it is quite debatable as to which moment to assign the term 'big bang'.According to a couple of speculative theories I have read, the inflationary stage came first and caused virtual particles to become separated and become real particles. A little like Hawking radiation. Further more these particles decayed to become stable particles, giving off lots of heat creating the hot big bang. The concept of Aeons conformal cyclic cosmology by Roger Penrose tends to side step singularities and Big Bangs, but does require inflation as g>0.Do you have a reference for your comment above.
I don't think any cosmologist would refer to the inflationary stage (which followed the big bang) an event... And while the inflation epoch was certainly of shorter duration than the Holocene, it represented a far greater percentage of the entirety of the history of time while it was going on.
For example, there are some puzzling features of our universe that can only be explained, some scientists argue, by the idea that our universe went through a short period (from somewhere in the vicinity of about 10−33 to 10−32 seconds after the Big Bang) of rapid expansion (by what scientists believe to be around a factor of 1026) after it emerged into existence. This idea is known as the theory of inflation, and is a widely accepted but still debated part of our universe’s beginnings.
In particular I am interested in reference to the time duration of the inflationary stage ie what do you mean by Significant time
Strict definitions in physics should never be taken from a dictionary. I wrote the glossary to a GR text before so I know how event is defined in SR/GR. I know SR very well and GR nearly as well. Look in any SR or GR text and you'll see that I'm write(right . Being a physicist myself the precise definition is second nature to me. Wikipedia is a lot more dependable than a dictionary when it comes to science.
It seems to be fairly common understanding. A quick search picks this random page:www.worldsciencefestival.com/2015/07/cosmological-inflation-primer/Quote from: WSFsiteFor example, there are some puzzling features of our universe that can only be explained, some scientists argue, by the idea that our universe went through a short period (from somewhere in the vicinity of about 10−33 to 10−32 seconds after the Big Bang) of rapid expansion (by what scientists believe to be around a factor of 1026) after it emerged into existence. This idea is known as the theory of inflation, and is a widely accepted but still debated part of our universe’s beginnings.My bold. Picture depicts this. Big bang is the singularity at left, the beginning of time as we know it. After inflation, space has expanded by 1026, which admittedly admits that the beginning wasn't a singularity or the size of the universe would be bounded.It says it is debated, and there is eterial-inflation multiverse theory that says that inflation was outside the big bang, but bubbles of regular space-time condense out of that. I think that might be what you reference. Under that theory, inflation is still going on and did not terminate after this short time.With eternal inflation, it becomes debatable which 'moment' or process to assign the term 'big bang'.
Quote from: PmbPhy on 18/03/2019 17:06:46Strict definitions in physics should never be taken from a dictionary. I wrote the glossary to a GR text before so I know how event is defined in SR/GR. I know SR very well and GR nearly as well. Look in any SR or GR text and you'll see that I'm write(right . Being a physicist myself the precise definition is second nature to me. Wikipedia is a lot more dependable than a dictionary when it comes to science.I do not doubt you. Being primarily English speaker and reading a lot of Pop Science as well as some good science, Am I wrong in thinking a Big Bang "event" happened 13.8 billion years ago.
Chances are, you've all seen this, but just in case.......https://profmattstrassler.com/articles-and-posts/relativity-space-astronomy-and-cosmology/history-of-the-universe/hot-big-bang/
Thanks for that Bill, according to the link inflation may have come first, resulting in the hot expansion.
Quote from: flummoxed on 18/03/2019 17:48:39Am I wrong in thinking a Big Bang "event" happened 13.8 billion years ago.Yes. That assumes there was an event called "big bang" but that's a myth. In modern cosmology there is no such event because there's no way to adduce such an event. Its based on an extrapolation. There are a lot of myths in pop physics. This one is explained in Peebles text on cosmology. Would you like me to quote that passage of his text?
Am I wrong in thinking a Big Bang "event" happened 13.8 billion years ago.
I am interested in anything you have to say, so if it is no bother if you have the Peebles text on Cosmology easily to hand, I would be interested to see what he has to say.
The familiar name for this picture, the "big bang" cosmological model, is unfortunate because it suggests we are identifying an event that triggered the expansion of the universe, and it may suggest the event was an explosion in space. Both are wrong. ... If there were an instant, at a "big bang," when our universe started expanding, it is not in the cosmology as ow accepted, because no one has thought of a way to adduce objective physical evidence that such an event occurred.
Quote from: flummoxed on 19/03/2019 10:04:51I am interested in anything you have to say, so if it is no bother if you have the Peebles text on Cosmology easily to hand, I would be interested to see what he has to say. From Principles of Physical Cosmology by Peebles, page 6QuoteThe familiar name for this picture, the "big bang" cosmological model, is unfortunate because it suggests we are identifying an event that triggered the expansion of the universe, and it may suggest the event was an explosion in space. Both are wrong. ... If there were an instant, at a "big bang," when our universe started expanding, it is not in the cosmology as now accepted, because no one has thought of a way to adduce objective physical evidence that such an event occurred.
The familiar name for this picture, the "big bang" cosmological model, is unfortunate because it suggests we are identifying an event that triggered the expansion of the universe, and it may suggest the event was an explosion in space. Both are wrong. ... If there were an instant, at a "big bang," when our universe started expanding, it is not in the cosmology as now accepted, because no one has thought of a way to adduce objective physical evidence that such an event occurred.