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#1201 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 4,643
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Buzz. The two plots have exactly the same metric, and both show the same positive curvature and the same test-particle equations of motion along the manifold.
Ctamblyn, I presume you mean "pi/2" rather than "pi". (ETA: Darn, I type too slow.) |
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#1202 |
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Deuteranomalous Individual
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Weymouth, UK
Posts: 970
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I agree, it is very misleading. Sadly, it also seems to be the most popular analogy going as far as TV documentaries and pop science books go (from what I've seen, anyway).
MTW's "parable of the apple", though a bit simplistic, is much better IMHO. If anyone wants to read it, someone has kindly copy-typed it here. |
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#1203 |
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Deuteranomalous Individual
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Weymouth, UK
Posts: 970
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#1204 |
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Free Barbarian on The Land
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 6,233
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"War exists within the continuum of politics, in which play is continuous, and no outcome is final, save for a global thermonuclear war, which might be." - Darth Rotor "Life, like a Saturday afternoon, finds its ruination in purpose." - MdC |
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#1205 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Poole, UK
Posts: 1,942
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Only you said "Below is another embedding diagram - again I've taken something with intrinsic curvature and embedded it in a 3D Euclidean volume in a way that preserves that curvature. Farsight - can you explain how you think the gravitational field for this solution differs?" I can measure that intrinsic curvature. I can detect that when I'm closer to the planet, things fall faster, and they fall down. When I'm further away from the planet, I don't measure that they fall faster, and fall up.
I've already said you can invert the "upturned hat" if you wish. Gravitational potential is said to be lower nearer the surface, but that's where the stress-energy density aka pressure is higher. On those surfaces? They can distinguish between living on the inside or the outside of a sphere. And in a gravitational field, when we do not concern ourselves with mundane things like planets, there are no surfaces. It's just a volume of space. Remember what I said: When it comes to embedding diagrams, don't get too excited about "higher dimensional spaces". The curvature we're talking about isn't the curvature of light, it's a curvature in the speed of light plotted with distance from the centre of a circular gravitating body. Since we use light to define out second and our metre, it's also a plot in the metrical properties of space. People call it curved spacetime, but space isn't curved, it's just inhomogeneous in a non-linear way. There are no surfaces present. Or should I say the only surface present where a black hole is concerned is the event horizon, which is shown as an edge in your depiction. You better try again edd. |
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#1206 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 1,550
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No, I don't think I need to try again.
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When I look up at the night sky and think about the billions of stars out there, I think to myself: I'm amazing. - Peter Serafinowicz |
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#1207 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Poole, UK
Posts: 1,942
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Yes you do. And you need to explain the distinction between living on the inside of a sphere and the outside, and the distinction between things falling up or down and slower or faster with distance from the centre. And you need to explain the extrinsic curvature in your depictions. What extrinsic curvature? Something we can't measure? Something mystic like your surfaces that aren't surfaces? I gave you a straight answer, if you won't reciprocate I win again.
I've responded time and time again to your requests for empirical evidence. I've supplied it. And still you continue to dismiss it and deny that I've supplied any evidence at all. You're exactly like the creationists I've had the misfortune to talk to. It doesn't matter what you show them, nope, that's not evidence. And still you dismiss Einstein and the variable speed of light whilst attempting to paint me as some "my theory" guy. You want the quotes again? The evidence again? Edd's question was on page 30, the context was RC referred to the standard example of cones where all of the curvature is at the vertex. You can take a vertical slice through a cone so it looks like this: V. Then flatten it out and the vertex is like where two flat regions meet. Then edd asked So if I take a sheet of paper and introduce a fold I've introduced some intrinsic curvature into the paper, is that right Farsight?. It's right when that sheet of paper is standing in for the V of the cone. RC blundered absolutely with his geodesic dome insisting that all regions were flat, ignoring the regions that included the vertices. Edd tried to cover it up by switching from analogy to topology, only we're talking about a gravitational field, not a piece of paper. A gravitational field isn't a cone. It has Riemann curvature, you can't transform it away, just like Einstein said. And finite regions are not flat, as we can see from Ed's picture: ![]() If all finite regions were flat, there wouldn't be any curvature. It would be a pink square. Or what, would it be tiled? Nope. I'm not the one in a hole here. You're the one in the hole, trying to say a gravitational field is flat. Now pay attention and let's see if you get it this time: when all finite regions of a hill are flat, then there isn't any curvature to get off the flat and level, so there isn't any gradient, constant or not, so there isn't any hill. Take away the Riemann curvature and your gravitational field has gone. Only you can't take it away. You cannot transform away a gravitational field. That's what distinguishes it from accelerating through space. That's the limitation of the principal of equivalence. It's a principle that likens a gravitational field to acceleration, but it doesn't say the two are exactly the same. Have you got this yet? And when you are accelerating through space watched by me, I see no black veil sweeping behind you. The Rindler horizon just isn't in the same league as the black hole event horizon. Are we all clear on this? |
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#1208 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Nova Roma
Posts: 8,417
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Oh, I see. So your logically inconsistent (not to mention flat-out wrong) assertions about curvature aren't actually wrong, it's just that sometimes you were talking about "mathematical curvature" and other times "common-usage curvature". Even though you kept linking to wiki articles you don't understand about Riemann curvature etc.
Sure. |
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#1209 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 10,783
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You are lying: I am talking about curved spacetime as Einstein talked about it and as anyone who knows about GR has talked about it in the last 90 or or years: as curved spacetime that is locally "flat" as required by GR.
You may try to read your links sometime:
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In GR, the manifold is explicitly defined as locally Minkowskian ("flat"). The concept is easy stuff: The principle of equivalence requires that the geometry that GR uses is locally Minkowskian. If the geometry that a theory of gravity uses is not locally Minkowskian this violates the the principle of equivalence and that theory is invalid. Thus by stating that spacetime is not locally Minkowskian you are stating that GR was invalid from the moment that it was written !
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#1210 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 10,783
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You still have it wrong.
The standard cone example is a 2-cone (like a 2-sphere). It just has a surface so there is no such thing as "vertical". The cut is along the surface from the vertex in a straight line. The cone does not look like a V. It looks like a cone with a cut along a surface !Think of a child's party hat. Now cut it from the point to the edge. Now flatten it out and you have one plane (not two regions!) that has a slice cut out of it. Any triangle on the cone that does not include the vertex adds up to 180 degrees because it does not cross the cut. This is the same mathematics that shows that a cylinder is intrinsically flat in the web page that you linked to: Intrinsic versus Extrinsic Curvature. You have blundered absolutely with this strawman (or are just lying). I stated that all of the flat regions were flat and that any region that includes the vertices is curved.Now ignore this yet again as you have been ignoring physics for most of your posts: No one except you thinks that GR has anything like this "when all finite regions of a hill are flat" fantasy. What GR states is that is the "hill" is locally flat. This means that any small enough region it acts as if you cannot tell a uniform gravitational field apart from a constant acceleration (the principle of equivalence). This corresponds to what we observe in real life - we measure triangles to sum up to 180 degrees, i.e. locally Euclidean. GR is an extension of SR so we make spacetime locally Minkowskian. Make the region big enough and you can detect the intrinsic curvature. |
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Real Science: NASA Finds Direct Proof of Dark Matter (another observation) (and Abell 520) "Our Undiscovered Universe" by Terence Witt: Review 1; Review 2 |
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#1211 |
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Deuteranomalous Individual
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Weymouth, UK
Posts: 970
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That is false, Farsight. I requested empirical evidence showing that the MTW picture of GR is wrong while supporting FGR. I have made very clear, on several occasions, exactly what I am looking for. You have never supplied such evidence, in this thread or elsewhere. The only empirical evidence you have supplied is consistent with "MTW" GR, and thus inadmissible. If you had, as you incorrectly claim, supplied what I asked for you'd have been able to link to it, but your reply here is conspicuously free of such a link. Why? Because the specific type of evidence I requested does not exist.
From what I have seen in this forum and in the "Relativity+" book, FGR/relativity+ is a vague collection of loosely related thoughts lacking any provable coherence and utterly devoid of utility. It fails to make useful, quantitative predictions to match those of standard GR or the SM. When it seemed to make qualitative predictions, on both occasions you stated that if those predictions turned out to be incorrect it would have zero impact on your confidence in your model - in other words, your model was actually unfalsifiable as far as those tests went. It is, in Pauli's words, not even wrong. As anyone can check for themselves, your reply shows that you appreciated (at the time, at least) that edd was referring to creases, not the apex of a cone. That is false, Farsight. As anyone can check for themselves, in my several posts to you on the topic I said that in GR spacetime is locally flat at every event, which it is. As has been pointed out by several people already, it would be gravely wrong to think that local flatness at every event implies global flatness. |
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#1212 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 1,550
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I don't - when did I last refer to things falling up or down and where did this sphere come from? Also I thought the embedding diagrams were clear enough - the extrinsic curvature is that which exists within the volume and which I arbitrarily chose to have curve one way or the other
Quote:
With regards to the geodesic dome geometry RC raised - you were the one insisting curvature was between two flat surfaces and along an edge. Not at a vertex. You are persistently wrong about the basics here, Farsight. You might have read a lot of Einstein and certainly quote him a lot, but all your understanding seems to have come from the Bluffer's Guide to GR. |
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When I look up at the night sky and think about the billions of stars out there, I think to myself: I'm amazing. - Peter Serafinowicz |
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#1213 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,378
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Well, I showed that FGR is internally inconsistent, and rather badly so*; does that count?
Recall one of the Einstein quotes Farsight is so fond of repeating: "1911: If we call the velocity of light at the origin of co-ordinates cₒ, then the velocity of light c at a place with the gravitation potential Φ will be given by the relation c = cₒ(1 + Φ/c²)" Recall that, in FGR, the impedance of space is something concrete, and fixed, like the impedance of a coaxial cable. And that it is tied inextricably to the speed of light. Now, per Einstein (and in FGR), the speed of light in one room in a tall building (in your local town, perhaps, or maybe in Poole, England) is different than the speed of light in a different room, in the same building, on a different floor (recall his - or Brian-M's - 'bouncing ball' parallel mirror light clocks). Hence the impedance of space will be different in those two rooms also. But the speed of light in a room on one floor depends on which (other) floor you choose to measure it from! As does the impedance of space!! So you must conclude that the impedance of space is not a fixed, constant thing; rather it depends on which observer is timing the ticks of the parallel-mirror light clock! Now Einstein was quite clear about this; he was, after all, explaining relativity. However, FGR is founded on some kind of pre-Newtonian absolute space and time (the local impedance of space cannot be observer-dependent, for example). In this way, many of the items on your list are actually hard scientific evidence showing that FGR is not an accurate description of the universe in which we live. * if you're interested, I'll dig up the relevant posts; IIRC, Farsight completely ignored them |
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#1214 |
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Deuteranomalous Individual
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Weymouth, UK
Posts: 970
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Yes, you're right. The "gravitation" part of FGR/relativity+ isn't "not even wrong", it's just wrong, along with the "neutrinos don't have non-zero rest mass" and "electrons are loopy photons" claims.
The "not even wrong" label should probably be reserved for those situations where Farsight has said "if X happens, it supports my position" and then a moment later "if X doesn't happen, it has no bearing on my position". |
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#1215 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 2,440
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Farsight versus Einstein, part 5
Farsight continues to contradict Einstein:
Farsight's saying Albert Einstein is in a hole. As Einstein explained in §13 of Die Grundlage der allgemeinen Relativitätstheorie, nonzero gravitational fields can occur in flat spacetime. Farsight's accusing Albert Einstein of not paying attention. As Einstein explained in §13 of Die Grundlage der allgemeinen Relativitätstheorie, nonzero gravitational fields can occur in flat spacetime, where the Riemann curvature is zero. Albert Einstein said gravity and acceleration are (locally) indistinguishable. That's the fundamental principle of Einstein's general theory of relativity. In Farsight general relativity (FGR), that fundamental principle becomes some kind of vague and limited analogy. Farsight has been unable to provide any quantitative explanation of how that principle holds or doesn't hold in FGR. Except for Farsight, all of us appear to be clear on this. We have given Farsight a concrete example of what Einstein was talking about in §13 of the most important paper he ever wrote about general relativity. In that section, Einstein identifies "the components of the gravitational field" with the connection. In our example, some of those components are nonzero, even though spacetime is (globally!) flat. Hence flat spacetime does not rule out the existence of a nonzero gravitational field. That counterexample to FGR has already been presented in considerable detail:
It's hard for Farsight to convince people that he's an expert on Einstein's theory of relativity when he understands so little of what Einstein wrote, but Farsight's doing the best he can. Those of us who understand Einstein's theory somewhat better will continue to point out that, throughout this thread, Farsight has been denying the two fundamental principles of Einstein's general theory of relativity:
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#1216 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Poole, UK
Posts: 1,942
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LOL! No you didn't. And it's Einstein's GR!
Yes, it's an Einstein quote. Huh? It isn't fixed. It's Z0 = √(μ0/ε0). Note that c = √(1/ε0μ0). And that c varies. Like Einstein said. It's different even in one room. The super-accurate optical clocks lose synchronisation when separated by only a foot of elevation. They can be in the same room. It doesn't matter whether they're down near the floor or up near the ceiling, provided one's a foot higher than the other, they lose synchronisation. And when we simplify them to parallel-mirror light clocks, this is what's going on: No it doesn't. They're in front of your nose. You can see that the speeds are different. There's a gradient in the impedance of space. And a gradient in gravitational potential. And a gradient in the speed of light. Like Einstein said: "If we call the velocity of light at the origin of co-ordinates cₒ, then the velocity of light c at a place with the gravitation potential Φ will be given by the relation c = cₒ(1 + Φ/c²)". Would you like the other quotes again from all the other years during the developments of GR? Bizarre. Dopa, your attempt at sophistry fails miserably, and your dishonesty is palpable. You shredded your own reputation long ago, and nobody is listening to you. |
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#1217 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Poole, UK
Posts: 1,942
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Surreal!
Which he distinguished from "special" gravitational fields which we call real gravitational fields, which can be distinguished because you cannot transform them away. OK guys, that's enough. Your dishonesty is not conducive to sincere discussion. |
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#1218 |
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Critical Thinker
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 378
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Here I thought that Farsight had nothing left to lie about, and you guys get him to lie about intrinsic curvature! I'm glad to see that his go-to defense about his own mistakes and lies is to accuse other people of lying.
Can someone point to me where Farsight calculated the behaviour of a black hole using c = cₒ(1 + Φ/c²)? |
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#1219 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,378
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It's a tactic he uses often.
Strangely, he has - apparently - been trying to explain his ideas to the world for several years now, and not a single other person seems to even understand them, let alone agree with them. Farsight's response to this totally failure to communicate? Well, there's no prize for the correct answer to that ...
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Further, there are essentially zero examples of Farsight presenting calculations of anything (he prefers verbal analogies and diagrams). Interestingly, there are many examples of people asking Farsight to provide calculations, or point to where he's published them; as far as I know, Farsight has never answered any such queries, and no one has managed to find any such either ... |
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#1220 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,378
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I thought you were ignoring me; oh well ...
No matter how many times I point to 50.7167° N, 1.9833° W on a map of the world, and declare that that's Palermo, Sicily, it remains Poole, England.
Quote:
Here's a more accurate statement of what the impedance of space is, in FGR: The impedance of space, at a particular point in space, is something concrete, and fixed, like the impedance of a coaxial cable. And that it is tied inextricably to the speed of light, at that particular point in space. Like the number of atoms of platinum in the international prototype kilogram, it has just one value, for all observers; like the air temperature in a building, that value varies with location.
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Repeat the exercise for observers in each of the apartments directly above this one. To be clear: each observer is calculating the value of the impedance of space in the small vacuum tube resting on the coffee table in the ground floor apartment. Using parallel-mirror light clocks. Show that the ten values of same physical thing - the value of the impedance of space in the small vacuum tube resting on the coffee table in the ground floor apartment - are the same.
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Earlier when you attempted this sort of thing you ended up with egg on your face (i.e. I asked JREF members to state if they agreed with me, or you, concerning a similar claim you made; no one agreed with you). Perhaps, this time, you might like to put some effort into explaining what you see as "sophistry"? I'm sure all those who "are listening to me" would be quite interested to read such an explanation. |
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#1221 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Poole, UK
Posts: 1,942
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I didn't have egg on my face. You did. You confused the way all observers see the lower clock running slower with different measurements by different observers at different elevations. Now you're trying the same drivel again. Go away Dopa, your physics is poor, your dishonesty is palpable, and nobody's listening to you.
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#1222 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 3,206
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#1223 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Poole, UK
Posts: 1,942
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#1224 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 3,206
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#1225 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Poole, UK
Posts: 1,942
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No you haven't. Click on your name on the left, then click on Find more posts by Tubbythin, and take a look at them. They're one-liners, and snipey. Now go look at my posts. Spot the difference?
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#1226 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 10,783
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Totally wrong: c is the speed of light in vacuum which is a constant in both SR and GR. Like Einstein said.
Quote mining Einstein is not good. He states after the equation that the "principle of the constancy of the velocity of light holds good" in GR. On the Influence of Gravitation on the Propagation of Light (PDF) "If we call the velocity of light at the origin of co-ordinates cₒ, then the velocity of light c at a place with the gravitation potential Φ will be given by the relation c = cₒ(1 + Φ/c²). The principle of the constancy of the velocity of light holds good according to this theory in a different form from that which usually underlies the ordinary theory of relativity. ".
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Real Science: NASA Finds Direct Proof of Dark Matter (another observation) (and Abell 520) "Our Undiscovered Universe" by Terence Witt: Review 1; Review 2 |
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#1227 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 3,206
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I'm not the one that has just been moderated.
My posts tend to have more scientific content when there is scientific content to respond to. When somebody makes false claims like "Go away Dopa, your physics is poor, your dishonesty is palpable, and nobody's listening to you." or claims false victories, its good to put them down a peg or to by pointing out they're wrong. |
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#1228 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,378
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So I guess that's as clear a statement from you as anyone can expect, to the effect that, in FGR, the impedance of space at a particular location is like velocity, and unlike air temperature - its value depends upon which (remote) observer is measuring it.
As the impedance of space is derived - in FGR - from the measured value of c (though only you know how to make such a calculation), this blows a pretty big hole in FGR, with respect to black holes, doesn't it? Recall your signature parallel-mirror light clock, the one in which you displayed the photons in the lower clock as not bouncing at all*? That was, if I recall correctly, critical to the FGR view of black holes. Funny thing is this: you've just confirmed that this measured c=0 is entirely observer dependent! It is entirely possible, within FGR, to find a remote observer who measures the speed of light at that location as something other than 0.Now I do not claim to have understood your views on coordinates in FGR, but I think that this also pulls the rug under your claims that one particular set is unique.
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But why waste time with bluster? Surely the credibility of your claims would have been better served by you either completely ignoring me, or responding with hard scientific evidence, logic, that sort of thing? * I'll provide a link to Farsight's actual post, in this thread, if anyone's interested |
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#1229 |
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Critical Thinker
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 378
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#1230 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Shanghai
Posts: 7,094
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For those interested in this topic, I've been watching a lecture by Leonard Suskind on youtube that does a pretty good job of explaining some of the things brought up in this thread:
http://youtu.be/i1s5eOJ3V6k |
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"... when people thought the Earth was flat, they were wrong. When people thought the Earth was spherical they were wrong. But if you think that thinking the Earth is spherical is just as wrong as thinking the Earth is flat, then your view is wronger than both of them put together." Isaac Asimov |
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#1231 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Belgium (Flatland)
Posts: 31,444
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Yesterday upon the stairs I met a man who wasn't there He wasn't there again today I wish that he would go away. |
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#1232 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Belgium (Flatland)
Posts: 31,444
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__________________
Yesterday upon the stairs I met a man who wasn't there He wasn't there again today I wish that he would go away. |
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