0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.
I can see what you were trying to do and it is absolutely brilliant.
However, you (Alancalverd) must also know that there is no way you could convert that photon into a particle anti-particle pair.
What a terrific return on a two billion dollar plus investment AND it has increased our knowledge of the Universe we live in beyond belief.
The talk about gravity waves is very interesting
Since work done is equal to force x distance it is possible to calculate the work in Joules that an 80 Kg man taking a single step would exert at a distance of a 1000 km. It turns out this force would be equal to 850/1000,000 = 0.000085 J at the LIGO site.
Quote from: alancalverd on 18/05/2021 23:42:27Would you care to put a number to the mass of a photon? Think you can put a value on the equivalence substituting hf for E in the famous equation
Would you care to put a number to the mass of a photon?
How do you define "thought experiment"?
At least there are theories which don't preclude the possibility of all hats turning green.
I think it's been established that GR cannot resolve the situation with a sudden disappearance of the sun.
What is this insight that you feel is gained from it?
Go back fifty years and imagine people were told "gravity isn't instantaneous action at a distance like we thought".
I think it is a mistake to characterize gravity as 'action' at all. It's a field, not something that radiates towards us
(despite Colin2B's attempts at platitude) I'm still ashamed to say that I have propagated the myth by using the example with one other person in the past.
We (that'll be at least Halc and I) don't think Einstein was motivated by that thought experiment, it is more like an urban myth.
I see you have also heard of this example, it is widespread.
You frequently mention that it is the job of a university to correct and fix these misconceptions.
There may be a clue here https://www.pitt.edu/~jdnorton/teaching/HPS_0410/chapters/general_relativity_pathway/index.html
Neither can it resolve how I could go back in time
So try something a little more valid. Put a strong string on Earth and yank it away.
It's a field, not something that radiates towards us.
But if you’re happy, that’s nice
I am not to sure how many others you have convinced
The name "gravity wave" is perhaps an unfortunate one... motions of gravitating masses
It seems that proposing an alternative example to illustrate the (delayed) action of gravity might be sensible.
The sudden disappearance of the sun is much more like an example situation to help visualise something about GR. It simply doesn't fit the criteria to be considered a "thought experiment" (IMHO).
This is a quality resource and it has kept me occupied for hours. Thank you, thank you. I think you've already pulled the text that is most relevant to this forum thread and put it directly into your earlier post.I don't seem to have much disagreement with or from you, Colin.
Any student wishing to follow this example through more carefully with some Mathematics can find a way to provide that acceleration to the sun. They can add stiff strings, photon rockets or high momentum incoming ping-pong balls if they need to. The main thing is that they don't hit a wall that stops them proceeding with the Mathematics as soon as they look at the E.F.E. and realise that the proposed stress-energy tensor isn't even continuous let alone differentiable.
I think it is a mistake to characterize gravity as 'action' at all. It's a field, not something that radiates towards us.