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In contrast, GR is frequently associated with a finite speed for the propagation of gravity through space.
This may be called the "speed of gravity" in many PopSci articles and it is also frequently claimed to be identical to the speed of light.
ii. If the Sun suddenly disappeared… Astronomy magazine, 2012iii. Here's what would happen if the sun disappeared right now, Business insider, 2015.
Google will bring a list of such instances involving well known Q&A sites like Quora, Physics Stack Exchange
1. Have you encountered a similar example being used in your own learning?
How long would it take the earth's orbit to be affected by a sudden disappearance of the sun?
We propose that GR can produce more than one answer to the way in which the orbit is affected
Changes to the field do propagate, and do so at the speed of light, which has been repeatedly verified
It’s your story and you can make any answer you want since the physics in your scenario is different than reality. You are free to make up new rules.
I have to ask, why has this example become so common in the popular media and some articles that directly aim to teach General relativity?
Would you agree that we (human beings) should all stop using this example when we teach or discuss the differences between GR and Newtonian gravity with others?
I challenge this assertion: The equations of General Relativity take the state of the universe at one moment in time, and predict how it will look at the next moment in time
This is ignoring "impossible" scenarios like "If the Sun suddenly disappeared...".- If you do something undefined to the universe, then of course it will have undefined impacts on the universe!
Why did Alancalverd make this statement: "Now a gravitational field is only associated with a mass. So if we create a mass ex nihilo, its gravitational field will propagate isotropically at c,..."
That seems to indicate that the photon has gravitational mass.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 18/05/2021 13:45:50That seems to indicate that the photon has gravitational mass......... The fact that we can ascribe momentum to a photon does not imply that it has gravitational mass......
The cosmic catastrophe is a thought experiment in which the sun were to instantaneously disappear. The question is what would then happen to the earth and the other planets orbiting the sun. According to Isaac Newton's classical theory of gravity, the planets would immediately cease to move in circular motion, and inertia would make them start traveling in a straight line.Albert Einstein saw a deficiency in Newton's theory. The finiteness of the speed of light would mean that it would take a certain amount of time before the darkness from the sun's absence would reach the orbiting planet. Therefore, why would the planet instantaneously start traveling in a straight line before the arrival of information that the sun's disappearance has occurred?The cosmic catastrophe thought experiment led Einstein to the invention of the General Theory of Relativity and the creation of the concept of spacetime. Spacetime allowed Einstein to fix the deficiency in Newton's theory. In Einstein's spacetime model, the disappearance of the sun would create gravitational waves in the spacetime. The gravitational waves travel at the speed of light, and an orbiting planet would not react to the sun's disappearance until after the gravitational wave has reached it. Only then, the planet would start to travel in a straight line.
I've got to support Bored_Chemist here. Actually, yes it (almost) does... just replace the word "gravitational mass" with something like a "gravitational effect similar to a mass" in Bored_Chemists statement, which is what he/she was trying to imply.
I think half of the article is right (which is polite way of saying half of it isn't).
Is that really what motivated Einstein?
I thought it was elevators and those sorts of thought experiments plus a real-life window cleaner (or builder) who actually did fall off a ladder and gave Einstein "one of his happiest thoughts".
Are there any Science historians here who can back up the claim that the Cosmic Catastrophe was a thought experiment that motivated Einstein?
I'm certain Einstein can't be credited with developing spacetime
I'm suspicious that this Wikipedia article is an example of what can happen when people are bombarded with poor examples comparing GR against Newtonian gravity.
Would you care to put a number to the mass of a photon?
Hi everyone. ii. If the Sun suddenly disappeared, it would take about eight minutes for Earth to become dark (due to the speed of light). How long would it take to feel the absence of the Sun's gravity?, Astronomy magazine, 2012https://astronomy.com/magazine/ask-astro/2012/05/gravity---the-traveler
Open admission ---> I have used the example of the sudden disappearance of the sun when discussing GR (and I wish I hadn't done it).
This is not meant to be a monologue about what I think. I'm interested in discussion. If there is a personal objective for this thread, then it is to try and persuade people to stop using certain phrases and/or certain PopSci ideas in the teaching of General relativity.
isn't the Sun disappearing example, just a thought experiment to highlight the difference of Einsteins postulate to Newtons ?Is there any empirical evidence to support the postulate ?