Experiment This Weekend To Measure Speed Of Gravity 91
An anonymous reader writes: "Is gravity an instantaneous phenomenon, as we were taught in high school, or is its speed, like all other Einsteinian phenomena, bounded by the speed of light? A radical new experiment, proposed by Sergei Kopeikin, and involving the Very Long Baseline Array, is set to occur this weekend, and results should be known within about two weeks."
I thought (Score:1)
Experiemnt (or observation) is good for science. But I'll still bet anyone that the current theories will be supported by the new evidence.
Re:I thought (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course it is understood (Score:1, Informative)
In other words, speed-of-light gravity + curved space-time (Einstein) = instantaneous gravity + Euclidean space (Newton) + 4th order error.
That 4th order term fixes the discrepency in Mercury's orbit, so Einstein's theory wins over Newton's because it explains Mercury's orbit. Speed-of-light gravity it is.
Re:Of course it is understood (Score:1, Informative)
Somebody cooked the books.
Re:Bound by Speed of Light (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course, these type of gross approximations continue well into college physics, where they are refered to as "back of the envelope calculations." And still, a good teacher will let you know what approximations he is making.
Re:Bound by Speed of Light (Score:1)
If it's instantaneous... (Score:5, Interesting)
Fun to think about. Probably more practical for a science fiction story than reality.
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, perhaps a very finely-tuned vibration of a specific type could show up in a Fourier spread, even if the power were incredibly low. But even so.....
Probably more practical for a science fiction story than reality.
Undoubtedly! But fun to speculate.
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:2)
It goes both ways though. If you can move something large back and forth quickly to transmit via gravity, then you also endure resistance (energy loss) remotely.
This would mean faster-than-light energy transmission. Again, though... at very low magnitude.
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:1)
I'll go file a patent just in case someone figures out an implementation of e=mc^2.
Don't you love solving one neigh impossible problem with another?
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:4, Interesting)
Or is my understanding whacked?
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:1)
I'd phrase it as: it all depends on what units you prefer. The difference between joules and kilograms as units of mass-energy is in many ways similar to the difference between metres and parsecs as units of distance. They are just multiples of each other, and one unit is a very large multiple of the other.
Paul
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:2)
Definitely. The nearest place I can think of where faster-than-light communication might be useful would be Mars, and then, only for ultra-time-critical purposes. Like playing the stock market, perhaps. A market 'rise' could be a lessening of gravitational pull, a market 'fall' could be an increase.
And a market 'crash'.... Oops. Scratch that, bad idea.
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:2)
Imagine RFC10023: TCP/IP and IPv6 Over Gravity Waves.
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:2)
Which would then have to be faster than light, too, or it wouldn't help much.
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:1)
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:1)
This would get around light speed restricted communication, so I doubt it will ever be possible. I hope I am wrong however.
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:1)
I remember hearing that they pulled that off between Britain and main-land Europe some time last year..
Re:If it's instantaneous... (Score:1)
Isn't this the basic idea behind Star Trek's "subspace" communications?
No, Subspace communications is not instantaneous (Score:1)
Does it have a speed? (Score:4, Interesting)
Imagine two balls spinning around eachother in space. each ball sees the other one a bit in the past. They will get faster and faster as they see eachother infront of themselves. Sortof surfing eachothers gravitational field.
Or am I just wrong?
Re:Does it have a speed? (Score:1)
The "message" that tells an mass that it is being acted on by another mass is relayed, theoretically, by the elusive "graviton", a particle which so far has been unobservable, except during episodes of Star Trek Voyager. The speed of the graviton travelling from one mass to another would always be no greater than the speed of light.
Re:Does it have a speed? (Score:1)
This is analagous to electrons in an atom dropping into a lower energy state and radiating photons.
I've never studied the physics of GR, but I assume it is somewhat analagous to the retarted potentials you study in undergraduate E&M.
Re:Does it have a speed? (Score:2)
Re:Does it have a speed? (Score:2)
Re:Does it have a speed? (Score:2)
Speed of anti-gravity (Score:5, Funny)
I'm not sure about the speed of gravity (the force reponsible for attraction between two bodies) but I've noticed that the speed of anti-gravity (the force responsible for repulsion between two bodies) is roughly the speed of light. Everytime I see some hot babe in a bar and start walking towards her, she turns and runs away in the opposite direction when she sees me coming.
If independent verifcation of this experimental result is needed, I can get my buddies (who always guffaw when this happens) to pledge that these results are repeatble!
GMD
Re:Speed of anti-gravity (Score:2)
gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:4, Interesting)
As I understand it, Quantum theory describes the very small very well, and Relativity describes the very large very well, and each describes the middle (our normal perception) fairly well (particularly relativity). There has been a search to unify these into a single theory, but it keeps breaking down, and my understanding is that it's gravity that generally gets in the way.
As a result, I've come to the conclusion that we are very wrong about gravity at a fundamental level, though our understanding is certainly good enough to get from place to place in space. The problem is, I don't know what to replace that underlying understanding with. My cosmology isn't complete there.
It seems that either way that this experiment turns out, it is going to be one of those events which is looked back on as pivotal in our understanding of the world.
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:1)
Quantum Theory describes phenomina on very small distance scales. And does it very well - in fact, it's often heralded as the most successful theory of all science.
General Relativity describes interactions between very heavy objects over very large distances.
Where these two break down is when very heavy objects interact over very small distances - such as inside a black hole, and this is where new theories like superstring theory or M-Theory are attempting to fill the gap. Problem is, we don't understand enough mathematics to even write the complete equations down!
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:5, Informative)
In Superstring theory, gravity is not a force, but more is due to a fundamental warping of the multi-dimensional space our universe exists in due to concentrations of matter/energy (yes, according to string theory, and as an outgrowth of relativity, concentrations of energy also create gravity). Thus, if the warping is instantaneous, so would the apparent effect of gravity... but if the warp takes time to propagate, then 'gravity' would travel at a slower speed.
Interesting result of this, though, is that if gravity is instantaneous, we get an easy FTL communication method... But if gravity isn't instantaneous, then there are all sorts of conservation of energy questions (for example: take the sun away... if gravity is not instantaneous, then the Earth continues to orbit empty space for another 8 minutes... where does that energy come from?)
Check out The Universe In A Nutshell by Hawking. There's also a _really_ in depth book called Supersymmetry, but I forget the author.
-T
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:1)
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:1, Insightful)
I wonder if the speed of magnetic effects can be measure more easily that gravity.
Speed of magnetic effects (Score:1)
Sure thing. It *is* the speed of light, since the photon is the carrier of this force.
Re:Speed of magnetic effects (Score:1)
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:2)
For arbitrarily large values of "easy".
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Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:2)
Speaking of that...if gravity is a warping of spacetime, how is it that a body is ripped apart as it enters the event horizon of a black hole? Any of my physics professors that described black holes always said that a body would be ripped apart by the difference in gravitational forces as approaching a black hole. If gravity is a warping of spacetime, wouldn't mass in the warped space be warped as well, and therefore maintain its structural integrity?
I must be missing part of the picture here...I do actually have a bachelor's in physics, but this is something that I've wondered about for a long time.
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:2)
It's not so much dependent on the event horizon, but rather the gradient of gravity change (tidal effects)...
For instance - here on Earth, there's a very slightly greater force pulling your feet towards the ground than is pulling your head, because your head is an additional ~1.5 meters away (miniscule difference compared to the radius of the earth, which is why it's barely measurable).
However, if you have something as dense as a black hole, with such a tiny radius, then the 1.5 meter difference (or 100 meter for your spaceship) starts to really matter... Though the whole ship is being pulled in, the nose is being pulled in a lot harder than the tail. In fact, eventually, the atoms are getting pulled in with enough of a gradient that they get ripped apart from each other.
As another example, think of a drop of water, rolling over something spherical, like a ball... It starts to elongate as the tip of it goes onto a more vertical section than the back of it. If it were an even more pronounced curve, then the tip of the drop would break off, leaving the back to slowly roll after it.
-T
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:2)
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:2)
Well, the easiest theorized one (blame Robert L. Forward... see the book "Indistinguishable from Magic") is to take a really dense and small mass (such as a quantum black hole... real dense, real small, no Swartzchild radius), spin it up and charge it by shooting electrons at it, and then use big, powerful magnets to move it back and forth very quickly. The oscillations, provided gravity is instantaneous, would be measureable at a long distance (the bigger the mass, and the more you move it, the farther away you could measure it).
Then, just move it in a sine wave as a carrier, and do some FM modulation on top of that carrier. Easy FTL device, provided gravity is FTL.
-T
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:2)
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:2)
-T
Re:gravity doesn't exist, per se (Score:2)
Press Release (Score:2, Informative)
A copy of the actual paper (Score:5, Informative)
Warning: The paper contains some very seriously heavy math. It uses things like the Euler Gamma function, Lorentz factors and stuff like that. You have been warned.
What is this 10-20% accuracy business??? (Score:2)
Instant? (Score:1)
Two Months (Score:1)
I have a really great
My bad. (Score:1, Interesting)
Sorry.
On a related note, I was just reading a page at the VLBA [nrao.edu], and their data collection methods sound rather archaic:
not speed (Score:1)
Re:not speed (Score:1)
the acceleration.
Re:not speed (Score:1)
In other words, if a black hole with 10 million times the gravitational force of the sun instantly appeared in place of the sun would it:
a) take the 8 minutes (that's how long light takes to get to earth) for us to all get sucked off the face of the earth, or will it
b) instantly suck us off the face of the planet?
I kinda like the instant sucking off myself!
Vincit qui se vincit.
Bound by the speed of light (Score:1)
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:2)
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:1)
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:2)
Given the complexity of the topic of discussion, I think nit-picking is appropriate.
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:2)
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:1)
I see I have to get nit-picky too.
My point definitely was not that "Einstein showed something".
The point I made was based on accepted theory which SUGGESTS (happy?) something may travel at speeds in excess of the speed of light, and that only acceleration to and/or beyond the speed of light is impossible because the energy required would be infinite.
The original article contains an assumption on the author's part that the theory requires that the speed of light is an inviolable upper boundary. My point was simply that this is an inaccurate interpretation.
Therefore, my point is not invalid. The worst you can say is that my choice of a single word was unfortunate. As another responder noted, perhaps this subject requires nit-picking to a degree which makes such distinctions important, but somehow I suspect my /. response isn't going to influence the researchers involved.
So, as I noted previously, I concede that Einstein didn't SHOW anything in the sense that SHOW can be interpreted as providing incontrovertible evidence (and I suppose I could argue that point, too, if I didn't have a life to get back to). Nonetheless, accepted theory does allow for travel beyond the speed of light, and therefore the original article text's assumption that the speed of light was an absolute upper limit is based on an incorrect interpretation of the applicable theory.
Hopefully you are happier with this over-anal-yzed wording.
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:1)
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:2)
Magic. Or rather, "it's just created that way". Consider an electron changing energy levels and emitting a photon. That photon does not accelerate from whatever speed the electron has up to the speed of light, it's created going at the speed of light. A hypothetical tachyon is created going faster than light. Such a tachyon also has an imaginary rest mass, but it's never at rest.
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:1)
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:1)
Re:Bound by the speed of light (Score:2)
But AFAIK it also says (or this may be deduced from above) that "information cannot be transmitted faster than the speed of light", and if gravity acts simultaneously then I could transmit information by moving an object and letting you detect the change in the gravitational field. OK, me moving a rock might be hard to distinguish from a couple of light years away (anyone care to work out what the hamming distance would be, how many correction bits you'd need) but it is something I've always wondered about.
USENET sci.physic FAQ (Score:5, Informative)
conclusion is overstated (Score:2)
If the experiment showed infinite propagation velocity, it would invalidate GR. But it is a common fallacy among physicists to claim that conducting an experiment that can invalidate a theory "tests" that theory. The problem with that view is that there are many other possible theories of gravity that differ substantially from GR but still have finite speeds of gravitational interactions. In fact, merely imposing finite speed on Newtonian gravity (and doing some fixing up to make the result consistent) gives you an interesting theory that is quite similar to the experimental predictions of GR in many ways.
Re:conclusion is overstated (Score:2)
Maybe it is a semantic problem, but I guess I don't understand your point. If the experiment says that GR needs to be changed, what does that have to do with the other theories of gravity you mentioned? If the experiment showed infinite propagation velocity (though I don't know how you show that given experimental uncertainties), then I think the finite-velocity theories you allude to also take a hit, and I would say those theories didn't "pass the test." If the experiment shows a finite velocity, then those other theories pass the test and they get to stay on the island for another week.
Re:conclusion is overstated (Score:2)
But it is a common fallacy among physicists to claim that conducting an experiment that can invalidate a theory "tests" that theory.
No, tests can have false positives or false negatives and still be "tests". Do you think the Miller-Rabin primality test is not a test because it is possible for composites to pass it? Where did you get this use of the word "test"?
In fact, merely imposing finite speed on Newtonian gravity (and doing some fixing up to make the result consistent) gives you an interesting theory that is quite similar to the experimental predictions of GR in many ways.
And if this theory makes predictions that differ from GR, one could use them to test GR. What's your point? No one's claiming that a theory cannot be wrong as long as it passes at least one test.
Results timeframe off (Score:3, Informative)
The articles says two months.
Re:Results timeframe off (Score:2)
The articles says two months.
It's a relativistic effect. Data moves really fast over the internet, so there is a time dilation.
Obviously.
gravity... (Score:1)
Er, what does "speed" mean? (Score:2, Insightful)
In which case, the idea of a cosmic speed limit fails as well, since we measure velocities in terms of displacement per unit of time. Without the idea of locality, the first of those units ceases to exist, and the second comes under some serious suspicion...
Speed of light (Score:2)