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I don't think option B would be detectable at LIGO at all. LIGO detects changes in the distance between mirrors. When a gravitational wave passes through the detector, it causes an alternating expansion and contraction of the distances between the mirrors. The frequency of that alternation increases as two black holes come closer and closer to each other in their orbits until they merge. A rogue planet wouldn't replicate that.
If there was a theoretical way to calculate the spacetime curvature where the observer was compared to what it would have been had the rogue planet never existed then could that be done?
And might the theoretical changes bear any comparison at all with the changes in scenario A?
Quote from: geordief on 07/08/2025 21:45:10If there was a theoretical way to calculate the spacetime curvature where the observer was compared to what it would have been had the rogue planet never existed then could that be done?You can calculate the difference in force with pretty straightforward arithmetic, but the fact that Jupiter itself doesn't seem to be screwing with LIGO, despite being millions of times closer than the hypothetical rogue planet and changing its distance from us at a much higher rate would strongly suggest that it wouldn't produce a detectable signal of any kind.QuoteAnd might the theoretical changes bear any comparison at all with the changes in scenario A?In theory, a massive object approaching us should cause an incredibly teeny, tiny change in the distance of the mirrors over time. Even if you could detect it, it would be happening at a rate many orders of magnitude slower than what gravitational waves would cause. Also, the effect on the mirrors would be different. LIGO has two arms oriented at 90 degrees from each other for a reason: gravitational waves will affect each arm in a different and predictable way. That wouldn't be the case for a rising gravitational force from an approaching rogue planet.
Is it correct to describe the effect on the distance between the two mirrors as being caused by a change in the curvature of spacetime at that (those) moment(s)? -caused by the arrival of the gravitational wave.
And secondly ,when the effect of something like an approaching rogue planet travelling for trillions of years before it reaches the observer is calculated mathematically is it necessary to account for any quantum effects or is there no limit to the smallness of the size of the effect that can be calculated by purely classical means?
"It is indeed a change in space. It is an expansion of space in one axis with a simultaneous contraction of space on an axis ninety degrees offset from the first. Followed by the opposite: a contraction on the first axis"
I hope this is not just pedantry but would it be correct to describe those movements (btw is it movements of just space or spacetime as I assumed?) as changes in the curvature of spacetime?