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Rethinking relativity: Is time out of joint?
New Scientist ^
| 21 October 2009
| Rachel Courtland
Posted on 11/02/2009 9:29:43 PM PST by Kevmo
Rethinking relativity: Is time out of joint?
EVER since Arthur Eddington travelled to the island of Príncipe off Africa to measure starlight bending around the sun during a 1919 eclipse, evidence for Einsteins theory of general relativity has only become stronger. Could it now be that starlight from distant galaxies is illuminating cracks in the theorys foundation?
....
Yet it is still not clear how well general relativity holds up over cosmic scales, at distances much larger than the span of single galaxies. Now the first, tentative hint of a deviation from general relativity has been found. While the evidence is far from watertight, if confirmed by bigger surveys, it may indicate either that Einsteins theory is incomplete, or else that dark energy, the stuff thought to be accelerating the expansion of the universe, is much weirder than we thought (see Not dark energy, dark fluid).
The analysis of starlight data by cosmologist Rachel Bean of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, has generated quite a stir. Shortly after the paper was published on the pre-print physics archive, prominent physicist Sean Carroll of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena praised Beans research. This is serious work by a respected cosmologist, he wrote on his blog Cosmic Variance. Either the result is wrong, and we should be working hard to find out why, or its right, and were on the cusp of a revolution.
.... At this stage, its hard to say what would happen if the deviation from general relativity was confirmed. Cosmologists have already considered some modifications to general relativity that could explain the universes acceleration (see Not dark energy, dark fluid).
....
(Excerpt) Read more at newscientist.com ...
TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: anisotropy; antigravity; bigbang; coldfusion; cosmology; electricuniverse; electrogravitics; energy; energypolicy; evolution; fusion; fusionenergy; gravity; inflation; intelligentdesign; nuclear; physics; science; scientism; stringtheory
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To: reaganaut; Alamo-Girl; betty boop
I think photon decay would be testable in the lab.
Since I’m already in way above my head, I’m pinging my 2 favorite cosmologists, Alamo Girl and Betty Boop.
21
posted on
11/02/2009 9:58:38 PM PST
by
Kevmo
(So America gets what America deserves - the destruction of its Constitution. ~Leo Donofrio, 6/1/09)
To: Kevmo
Because gravity becomes not a distortion of space or a stretching of time, the gravitational acceleration effect we see is because of the interactions of the zero point energy field.
The pointer I gave you is for the abstract, the article is available online, but you have to really, really dig for it.
Here’s another presentation Puthoff gave to Nasa.
http://www.keelynet.com/gravity/putnasa.htm
22
posted on
11/02/2009 9:58:50 PM PST
by
djf
(Having a gun and not needing it is better than needing one - and not having it! Way better!!)
To: reaganaut
I have long wondered if the redshift were actually caused by decay of photons (the speed of the particle constant, but the wavelength decreasing). If so, the universe may not be expanding at all. If neither the speed nor the wavelength of light is constant, what do we really know?
Or that higher redshift is a property of younger matter as seen in the decreasing,
quantized redshift in successively more distant quasars ejected from Seifert galaxies.
23
posted on
11/02/2009 10:01:35 PM PST
by
aruanan
To: Kevmo
And from the paper I just cited...
“Sakharov came to the conclusion that the entire panoply of general relativistic phenomena could be seen as induced effects brought about by changes in the quantum-fluctuation energy of the vacuum due to the presence of matter.”
Now, Sakharov himself ain’t no slacker.
He is credited as being the father of the Soviet H-bomb!
24
posted on
11/02/2009 10:03:36 PM PST
by
djf
(Having a gun and not needing it is better than needing one - and not having it! Way better!!)
To: djf
Keelynet is still around! Cool.
I usually don’t trust Targ & Puthoff after James Randi handed them their hats with his simple demonstrations proving their research into psychic phenomena was a waste of time. But it looks like an interesting read.
Question: Is this the origin of the phrase “Zero Point Energy”? I noticed that even Sci Fi started using this phrase a while back.
25
posted on
11/02/2009 10:04:23 PM PST
by
Kevmo
(So America gets what America deserves - the destruction of its Constitution. ~Leo Donofrio, 6/1/09)
To: Kevmo
Not sure, but I doubt it is the origin.
26
posted on
11/02/2009 10:09:19 PM PST
by
djf
(Having a gun and not needing it is better than needing one - and not having it! Way better!!)
To: Kevmo
Photon decay would imply via the Uncertainty Principle that the range of the electromagnetic force was not infinite. To the precision that we can measure, it is infinite.
27
posted on
11/02/2009 10:27:15 PM PST
by
FredZarguna
(It looks just like a Telefunken U-47. In leather.)
To: Lokibob
Not true. In fact, not even close.
There are two postulates of Special Relativity:
- All inertial reference frames are equivalent; consequently absolute uniform motion cannot be detected.
- The speed of light is a constant which is the same for all inertial observers.
28
posted on
11/02/2009 10:32:04 PM PST
by
FredZarguna
(It looks just like a Telefunken U-47. In leather.)
To: aruanan; All
Hey, guys, too much overthinking it here.
It’s simply obvious that redshift is caused by the Palin wave.
;>D
29
posted on
11/02/2009 10:47:13 PM PST
by
RebelTex
(FREEDOM IS EVERYONE'S RIGHT! AND EVERYONE'S RESPONSIBILITY!)
To: Lokibob
Nothing in the theory of relativity is a constant, it is all relative to the observer. Not time, speed, distance, energy, mass, or speed of light. Speed is a measure of time vs. distance, and if time is relative or distance is relative, than the speed of light has got to be relative.That isn't exactly what relativity theory says. Einstein's first choice to name his theory was invariance theory. I have often regretted that he didn't keep the first name. That might have cleared up some misconceptions. Perhaps his theory is incorrect, but it would be important to represent his theory accurately.
30
posted on
11/02/2009 10:52:55 PM PST
by
stripes1776
("That if gold rust, what shall iron do?" --Chaucer)
To: Kevmo
31
posted on
11/02/2009 10:58:56 PM PST
by
Talisker
(When you find a turtle on top of a fence post, you can be damn sure it didn't get there on it's own.)
To: Kevmo
Special Relativity is in big, big trouble. Cf.: Questioning Einstein, by Tom Bethell.
Hint: The ether is back! And it’s the gravitational field.
There IS ether drift!
32
posted on
11/02/2009 11:54:29 PM PST
by
Arthur McGowan
(In Edward Kennedy's America, federal funding of brothels is a right, not a privilege.)
To: Kevmo
To: Arthur McGowan
I don’t believe Einstein said there is no ether.
I believe he said the ether cannot be detected.
To: Kevmo
In perspective. I assumed the /sarc tag at the end. In theory.
35
posted on
11/03/2009 3:05:00 AM PST
by
allmost
To: Lokibob
The constants are relative. The Lorentz contraction being infinite shows the limitations immediately.
36
posted on
11/03/2009 3:18:28 AM PST
by
allmost
To: RebelTex; allmost; Kevmo; GiovannaNicoletta; Markos33; Salamander; Slings and Arrows; Swordmaker; ..
"Hey, guys, too much overthinking it here. Its simply obvious that redshift is caused by the Palin wave."
Your comment, while no doubt made in jest, just might cut right to the heart of the matter.
While I really hate to quote from Democrats, there are moments when even the
AufgeblasenBlutegelBourgeoisieBurokraten get it right.
Tip O'Neill once said "All politics is local." What the ex-Speaker was trying to point out was the fact that people tend to view things from a purely selfish perspective. Thus political solutions are most popular when they address individual needs and concerns, rather than the general welfare of the country, on a principled basis.
What you might call "The Palin Wave" in astrophysics jokingly attributes anomalies in celestial phenomenon to relatively insignificant earthly events, but in fact you have pointed out our innate tendency to think that our observation of highly local phenomena can somehow generate laws and rules for a universe (more likely a multiverse) that the best of us cannot get our brains wrapped around.
Even our description of the distances in space, such as "parsec" are derived from the extrapolation of relationships in planetary movement that are less than insignificant in terms of the size of just the observable portion of the universe.
Point being, we should
expect to find that the laws we construct to explain our physical surroundings break down once we leave our local environs. To find anything else, would speak to the notion of a Creator God with a very limited imagination - for an infinite being.
WANTED - Schroedinger's Cat, Dead or Alive.
37
posted on
11/03/2009 4:06:16 AM PST
by
shibumi
(" ..... then we will fight in the shade.")
To: shibumi
38
posted on
11/03/2009 4:12:01 AM PST
by
allmost
To: eCSMaster
Actually, the Michelson-Morley experiment appeared to show there was no ether wind. But there is: It’s just much slower than Michelson and Morley thought it should be. They were looking for an ether wind caused by the earth’s motion in orbit, whereas the actual ether wind is only about 700 mph on the earth’s surface at their latitude. The earth’s gravitational field travels with the earth’s center—but it does not rotate with the earth.
39
posted on
11/03/2009 5:52:11 AM PST
by
Arthur McGowan
(In Edward Kennedy's America, federal funding of brothels is a right, not a privilege.)
To: altair
40
posted on
11/03/2009 7:18:16 AM PST
by
onedoug
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