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QuoteIt's a polite way of saying Philip Ball doesn't understand it.Phillip Ball did understand it and proceeded to offer his own explanation which I thought joined the category of 'not at all easy to follow'.
It's a polite way of saying Philip Ball doesn't understand it.
Gravity Waves revealed by wiggles on pre-filled in graphs, the so-called "Higg's Boson" supposedly found by electronic detectors -without leaving any trace in Bubble Chambers.
Doesn't present-day "Physics" increasingly resemble a mathematical construct, divorced from physical reality.
Quote from: charles1948 on 25/12/2020 20:41:05Doesn't present-day "Physics" increasingly resemble a mathematical construct, divorced from physical reality.That it does. Some of us consider that a wonderful clue instead something to be deplored. If you’re open to having your views challenged, become a physicist. If you’re not, join a church.
For example, suppose a Physicist makes some outlandish claim - like Black Holes provide a wormhole through Space and Time. Who's able to say "No they don't"? There's no experimental proof that they don't.
Whereas, suppose a Chemist were to claim, that mercury can be transmuted into gold, by mixing it with sulphur.. He/she would be a laughing-stock. Experiment would quickly expose the falsity of the claim.
Quote from: charles1948 on 27/12/2020 19:53:46For example, suppose a Physicist makes some outlandish claim - like Black Holes provide a wormhole through Space and Time. Who's able to say "No they don't"? There's no experimental proof that they don't.That claim is based on implications given by general relativity. So in order to successfully refute it (at least as best as one can without experimenting on actual black holes), then one either needs to demonstrate that general relativity does not, in fact, imply it, that general relativity is wrong, or that it violates the laws of physics in some way.Quote from: charles1948 on 27/12/2020 19:53:46Whereas, suppose a Chemist were to claim, that mercury can be transmuted into gold, by mixing it with sulphur.. He/she would be a laughing-stock. Experiment would quickly expose the falsity of the claim.What are they basing the claim on? Is it based on (or even predicted by) a highly successful theory, or is it pure speculation? That's the difference between coming up with any random idea that you want and an idea that has grounding in modern physics.
I love physics at the Newtonian mechanics end of the scale, but the cutting edge stuff leaves me disillusioned and impatient at the slow progress.
old idea of the medieval alchemists
Any wild ideas like Black Holes, Dark Matter, Wormholes, Negative Energy, Gravitons, Higgs Bosons, and all the rest, can't be experimentally tested.
I know you mention the "Laws of Physics", but who has decided what these Laws are?
I love Newtonian physics. It works, has been tried and tested for over three centuries, both mathematically and in practice.
I love physics at the Newtonian mechanics end of the scale
Quote from: charles1948 on 27/12/2020 21:16:56 I know you mention the "Laws of Physics", but who has decided what these Laws are?Consensus. Scientific laws are descriptive, not prescriptive. If an equation has been shown to predict a phenomenon with sufficient precision and consistency, it becomes a law. There is no penalty for nature breaking a law - we just investigate further and propose a better law.
How can there be any "laws" governing "randomness"? Surely the term "random" means essentially "lawless"?
When it investigates sub-atomic particles such as electrons, it is forced to conclude that they behave in a "random" way. That's to say - their precise positions within an atom cannot be calculated by any fixed mathematical equation.
All that can be done is assign higher and lower "probabilities" to where they are, at any given instant.
Much the same as rolling a pair of dice. You cannot predict what number the dice will add up to, at the instant they come to rest.
Einstein famously complained about this a century ago. Has his complaint been convincingly answered?
Quote from: vhfpmr on 27/12/2020 18:27:26I love physics at the Newtonian mechanics end of the scale, but the cutting edge stuff leaves me disillusioned and impatient at the slow progress.Like you, I love Newtonian physics. It works, has been tried and tested for over three centuries, both mathematically and in practice. The Apollo missions to the Moon used Newtonian mechanics to calculate their trajectories.But as you rightly say, the cutting-edge stuff of modern Physics must leave everyone with a feeling of disappointment. It seems like Physicists have lost the plot.
Quote from: charles1948 on 27/12/2020 21:43:24Quote from: vhfpmr on 27/12/2020 18:27:26I love physics at the Newtonian mechanics end of the scale, but the cutting edge stuff leaves me disillusioned and impatient at the slow progress.Like you, I love Newtonian physics. It works, has been tried and tested for over three centuries, both mathematically and in practice. The Apollo missions to the Moon used Newtonian mechanics to calculate their trajectories.But as you rightly say, the cutting-edge stuff of modern Physics must leave everyone with a feeling of disappointment. It seems like Physicists have lost the plot.I'm sure they'll get there eventually, I just have difficulty maintaining interest when (at 62) it doesn't look as if it'll happen in my lifetime.
Two of the advances which I predict in Physics are:1. The replacement of Einsteinian "Relativity" by a modified form of Newtonian Mechanics;2. The "Big Bang" idea being supplanted by a new "Steady State" theory.