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This is a rephrasing and reposting of my "What is gravity, really?",which Halc seems to think belongs in the NTs. But I'm not proposinganything new here. I am just exposing Youtube.Maybe I should have said "What causes gravity, really"?And of course I know it doesn't. I feel silly even asking it, rhetorically. But YT and Prof.Brainy Greene/horn/e insist it does!?Please have a look at my other post so I don't have to repeat it, here.I think YT has gone crazy, around the bend.
It is proposed that particles called gravitons cause objects to be attracted to one another.
Is it 4 km - for the amplification of the ripples?
Hi. Well this is one of the more interesting and polite discussion happening here today, I hope you won't mind if I join in.@Halc and in defence of @TommyJ , some sources of information do consider gravitons as the force carrying particle responsible for the force gravity. For example, in a school A level syllabus (age 16-18 in the UK) this is exactly what pupils would be taught.Wiki also goes along these lines:It is hypothesized that gravitational interactions are mediated by an as yet undiscovered elementary particle, dubbed the graviton.
In any quantum gravity field theory the graviton would be an elementary particle that mediates the force of gravitational interaction. As @Halc says it's not often used in this way. probably because the theory has real problems at the moment.
As you know QED treats photons as particles that carry or mediate the electromagnetic force. In this model charged particles interact by emitting and absorbing photons, but these photons don't experience the electromagnetic force themselves, and so they do not interact with each other, but the effects of electromagnetism are produced by the energy and momentum they carry. The photons that carry force are known as virtual particles in QED and are shown as internal interactions in the Feynman diagrams and basically are there to make the energy equations add up
Clearly, the graviton would have to fit a similar model, but I wonder what would take the place of charged particle interactions when, as @Halc says, the gravitational wave causes a disturbance in spacetime. We would certainly see that as a movement of test particles (as a distant observer)and in a Newtonian system would describe it as a force. Also, that movement (oscillation) of the test particles is not in the direction of the wave propagation, so nothing is being pulled towards the source, but it is similar to light exerting an effect on electrons in the photoelectric effect. Does GR give a clue? This isn’t an area I’ve looked into.
How much do you simplify at an early age, how much do some teachers really understand their subject?
Which is enough to suggest that any quantum field theory for gravity would be unlike anything else you've seen.