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Is it possible to say that the expanding/evolving universe creates "space" as a function of itself but that it expands "into" nothingness?
Also (separately but because these two thoughts occurred to me around the same time) is it possible for two objects to assimilate and become one object (I understand "objects" may be embedded in and part of the various fields)?
That all depends on one's definition of 'object'. The word seems to be an abstract one with no physical meaning. It simply means this collection of <whatever> being considered/treated as a unit
A Field might also be an object , I suppose(and everything is part of the Field(s) isn't it?
So Fields do merge don't they
and particles might be "one object" if they are all excitations of the one (combination of) Fields
.Hope I am not talking gibbonish ;-)btw My last (unanswered thread) was "Does the Universe expand into itself?"
Could you give me an example?
Well some have said that a Field is a set of measurements but others have said "no a Field is a thing in its own right".
Suppose we have a charge in one location then it will have its own Electric Field .Now ,if we have another separate charge it will also have its own Electric Field.These two electric Fields will (per my understanding) interact with each other and it will be (again as I anticipate) possible to view the two separate Fields as one "conglomerate"
Is "Space" distinct from "nothingness"? (and the Vacuum)
Quote from: OPIs "Space" distinct from "nothingness"? (and the Vacuum)My attempt:A vacuum is when you have removed all the baryonic matter from a volume of space.- You have to work very hard to ge a "good" vacuum, as atoms are always boiling off the container walls and seals.If you really want nothing, you would need to remove light (not entirely possible above absolute zero), neutrinos (not possible with any shielding we can imagine), and Dark Matter (we don't even know what it is, let alone imagine a way to keep it out).
OK so are we better just (re)starting from the position that a vacuum is not only impractical to create but that it is a misnomer and that we can only really talk about relative densities of whatever we are considering?
liminal matter constantly appears and disappears in the vacuum of space - does it not - causing the universe to expand?
The emphasis of your negation belies Heisenberg's uncertainty principle I feel.
Quote from: kr236rk on 21/06/2019 18:09:15The emphasis of your negation belies Heisenberg's uncertainty principle I feel.The uncertainty principle says that we cannot measure the position (x) and the momentum (p) of a particle with absolute precision, the more accurately we know one of these values, the less accurately we know the other. Nothing to do with particles popping in an out of existence.Did you read the article?
Yes, I am afraid it is beyond me. But the 'virtual particle' is a theory, I don't see that it can be proved or disproved beyond laboratory conditions, with all due respects to Mr Arnold Neumaier.
Virtual particles are not a theory...
The word 'theory' is used half a dozen times in that article, and a model is just a model & remains so until it can be proven or disproven & then discarded I feel.