Speed of Gravity Experiment Challenged 63
An anonymous reader writes "The previous hoopla over the discovery of the speed of gravity has an opponent from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Read about the latest calculations."
Solutions are obvious if one only has the optical power to observe them over the horizon. -- K.A. Arsdall
Re:I, too (Score:2, Offtopic)
Daniel
Re:I, too (Score:5, Informative)
Which one does general relativity predict? (Score:1)
Re:Which one does general relativity predict? (Score:5, Informative)
You would want gravity that moves at the speed of light. This is what most reasonable scientists expect, and probably what they assume.
All sorts of strange things can happen if it is instantaneous. According to Einstein, two people can disagree about what happens first if they are moving. A person at rest can see that event A happens at the same time as B. A person moving one direction will argue that A happens before B, while a person moving the opposite direction will argue that B happens before A. The strange thing is that everybody would be right!
Let's assume that gravity can travel at faster-than-light speed, and can be used for communication. Now, a person who is moving can see A happening, and call the operator at "B" and tell them to stop event "B from happening. The person moving in the opposite direction can see B happening and tell the operator at "A" to stop event A from happening. Who is right? Clearly, they both cannot be right!
It is possible that I am missing something here. Does anybody with more experience in this stuff have more insight?
Faster than light doesn't mean backwards in time. (Score:3, Informative)
--Mike--
IANAP
Re:Faster than light doesn't mean backwards in tim (Score:1)
Re:Faster than light doesn't mean backwards in tim (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe not "travel", but you can send a message backwards in time. This assumes that you can send faster-than-light messages in two different reference frames that are moving with a high relative velocity - you bounce the message back and forth between the reference frames, and the net result is that it arrives at its point of origin before it was sent.
Re:Faster than light doesn't mean backwards in tim (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Faster than light doesn't mean backwards in tim (Score:1)
This assumes that you can send faster-than-light messages in two different reference frames that are moving with a high relative velocity - you bounce the message back and forth between the reference frames, and the net result is that it arrives at its point of origin before it was sent.
But doesn't this argument assume that the special theory of relativity applies? Because if you look at the general theory of relativity, you have to account for (speaking from the point of view of one reference frame on
Re:Faster than light doesn't mean backwards in tim (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, this scenario assumes SR.
Because if you look at the general theory of relativity, you have to account for (speaking from the point of view of one reference frame only) the massively negative acceleration as the message is stopped and bounced back.
That's not an issue if you're only dealing with messages, rather than people (e.g. the "twins paradox"). To send a message between two reference frames, all you have to do is
Re:Faster than light doesn't mean backwards in tim (Score:1)
I appreciate the reply, and would like to ask a follow up question. Remember, IAJADBG (I am just a database guy).
That's not an issue if you're only dealing with messages, rather than people (e.g. the "twins paradox"). To send a message between two reference frames, all you have to do is send a pulse of light between them.
But this would be communicating with gravity permutations, not light pulses. What would the equivalent of color or spectrum shift be for gravity?
Re:I, too (Score:3, Interesting)
So we already recorded the difference without taking the speed of gravity into account. Our values are good to an extent, they fail where our theory is wrong.
Re:I, too (Score:3, Informative)
If gravitational changes propogate faster than c, it could have all kinds of interesting effects on our understanding of physics. Robert Forward started experiments on gravity "waves" back in the 60s, but still, as far as I know, nobody has demonstrated
Highschool physics (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:I, too (Score:5, Interesting)
the question could be more fundamental. Does gravity have a speed? Consider this: light is a particle (wave) traveling along a many dimensional space-time membrane. Now, we've defined (more or less) what a photon is; and, how it behaves. We expect it to travel no faster than c. The problem is, we don't really undertand the space-time thing.
We have some theories as to how space is constructed. One of the things physics is trying to do is to create a theory that ties together space, time, gravity, energy, mass, quantum mechanics (basically everything). It's proving to be very difficult and gravity is the problem. Would a gravity wave have to obey all of the "laws of physics" as we know them? maybe not. Not if our theories are wrong. A lack of understanding wrt gravity might be why we need to make claims about "dark matter" and "dark energy" in order to explain the accelerating universe.
You have to remember that our "laws" are based on observation. The rules (like no speed exceeds c) are based on mathematical models created to explain the observations. What if the models are close, but wrong?
Just something to think about.
Re:I, too (Score:5, Funny)
So what you're trying to say is that the speed of gravity is 42?
Re:I, too (Score:3, Interesting)
Getting off the beaten path of time, velocity and momentum is
Re:Black Holes (Score:1)
Re:Black Holes (Score:2)
Either that or gravity is instantaneous. Or light doesn't come out because it goes somewhere else.
Gravity (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Gravity (Score:1, Offtopic)
Daniel
Luckily... (Score:1)
Re:Luckily... (Score:3, Funny)
Daniel
Re:Luckily... (Score:2)
It's an in-joke, ok?
SB
Re:Gravity (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Gravity (Score:1)
Depends on whether unladen [armory.com] or not. If unladen, it will be different for Africa and Europe.
I sig therefore I am.
Repurcussions (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Repurcussions (Score:3, Insightful)
How's that? (Score:3, Insightful)
"When we're ready, I'll start moving this ball'o'mass towards and away from you."
What's impossible? Moving the mass around, detecting the mass in motion, or detecting it instantaneously?
Re:How's that? (Score:1)
Too bad it looks like the experiment was bunk... it'd be nice to know for sure. And what if it did go slower than the speed of light....? ;\
Re:Repurcussions (Score:4, Interesting)
God, it's late, and I'm tired, someone help me out on this one? I know I've read it over and over
SB
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Repurcussions (Score:3, Interesting)
Do not try to understand this by imagining a universe with an absolute time frame. That is the very understandable mistake that led you to the above post in the first place. The point of relativity is that there is no such fr
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2)
As I understand it, the effective transmission bandwidth(and therefore the amount of info that can be exchanged / function of time) is constrained in some way by the speed of light.
It's been a long time since I read it, and I don't really pretend to understand the math involved (although I do understand GR and SR from a conceptual viewpoint; higher calculus has never been my strongest subject
But I did remember the
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2)
IIRC they managed to created linked particles and by examining the signal log could tell which bits of the movement of the particle were the data but only after the fact, in other words they could not transmit data that way. In
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2)
I may be wrong, tho, it's been a while since I read it.
More stuff to reread. Sigh.
SB
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2)
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2)
See here [ernet.in]
Quote:
There are two conservative ways, and, third, a non-conservative way, to respond to EPR:
accede that nonlocal superluminal influences are possible. This violates Einstein locality ("state vector collapse should occur instantaneously at all point in configuration space") but does not violate signal locality ("no usable signal can be communicated faster than light's speed").
Another is that |Y> is not an intrinsic property of the qu
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2)
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2, Insightful)
Teleportation is simple, in theory. Just get 2 massive superconducting plates (a metal, for example) and place them very close together, just close enough that you can still walk between them. Then repeat at opposite end of t
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2)
Daniel
Re:Repurcussions (Score:1)
If it were possible to look so deeply into space and matter, so far that you could not âoezoomâ in any further, it might resemble something like a bubbling liquid. Now, assume you could charge 2 separate planes (most any sort of matter), which are in near pr
Re:Repurcussions (Score:1)
Discover how to find the square root of a negative and I'll make sure you become the most famous person in human history.
Imaginary numbers? That's the way to solve everything: When in doubt, make it up.
Re:Repurcussions (Score:1)
Re:Repurcussions (Score:2)
Re:Repurcussions (Score:1)
Speed of levity. (Score:1)
There will be a quiz on this later. (Score:1)
So as you can see, young Mr Kopeikin, the ability to measure gravity waves is dependant on your frame of reference. As Stuart (Look at what I can do) Samual points out, when you take into account the position of Jupiter and rotate your frame of reference, you cannot accurately measure the propigation effects of gravity with todays measurement instruments.
Mr Kopeikin:
Why do we have to learn this? We aren't really going to need this stuff outside school right? Like I'm really going to g