Renewed Gravity Research Could Soon Yield Results 89
t482 writes "Dr. Michelle Thaller has a nice article describing the current thoughts on gravity. Why is it so weak? Detecting gravity waves has turned into a bit of a cottage industry. "We are close," says MIT physicist Rainer Weiss, a pioneer in gravity wave research for more than 30 years. "I think sometime in the next two or three years we will see something.""
Re:Heavy! (Score:2, Informative)
Please explain (Score:2)
30 years and still no results? (Score:5, Funny)
(at the water cooler, 1973)
"Hi, Bob, seen any gravity waves lately?"
"Nope, but we're real close now."
(in an instant message, 2003)
"Hi, Bob, seen any gravity waves lately?"
"Nope, but we're real close now."
You gotta wonder what gets these people out of bed day in and day out.
Re:30 years and still no results? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:30 years and still no results? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:30 years and still no results? (Score:1)
I wish my phone would stop ringing.
Re:30 years and still no results? (Score:5, Funny)
Are you kidding? (Score:1)
I'd love to get paid for 30 years to continually look for something and not get canned for failing to deliver.
Maligning Einstein?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Maligning Einstein?? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not that I'm arguing with the point your making, (I might not go so far as Bad journalism, though), but Plato struct me as a really humorous example, si
Re:Maligning Einstein?? (Score:1)
In today's world, we call this a consultant.
Re:Maligning Einstein?? (Score:2)
And another thing (Score:4, Interesting)
I wish I could wrap my mind around these things, because it's fascinating as hell, I just can't quite fit it.
Re:And another thing (Score:5, Interesting)
The best likening I've heard of is the surface (2D) of a baloon.
The surface of the baloon has no borders, you can go around it like you want. Still, its space is finite. And if you pump it up, the space is expanding.
The mistake most people make in imagining the Big Bang is taking it literally. An explosion of material in space.
The point is there was no space in which the explosion happened and neither was material. Space happened. Material came even later.
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
Re:And another thing (Score:3, Informative)
Re:And another thing (Score:1)
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
The good news is that in an an infinite number of parallel universes, everything that CAN happen DOES happen somewhere. The bad news is that you are telepathetic in all universes, so it never happens anywhere.
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Re:And another thing (Score:2, Interesting)
Think in terms of energy levels. If we take a perfect vacuum, a space in which nothing exists, there is no energy. Of course, even space isn't a perfect vacuum. Such a vacuum would be expected to be found somehwere outside the measurable distance of the universe. "Beyond the edge," as it were. Thinking in terms of energy levels, we can percieve matter to be the highest energy level. Matter being thought of as energy condensed and slowed to a stable
Re:And another thing (Score:1)
Your impatience has cost you what might possibly have been a good read.
Re:And another thing (Score:1)
my appologies, what a stupid mistake.
Re:And another thing (Score:1)
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
Was space a result of the big bang or something? Was distance? If not, then what do you call the stuff 10 miles from the first moments of the big bang? I'm sure it would have a name, even if it were nothing.
Or, do you mean space, as in this definition?
"The infinite extension of the three-dimensional region in which all matter exists." [dictionary.com].
And, I'm confused by this your quote,
"The point is there was no space in which the explosion happened and n
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
> Was space a result of the big bang or something? Was distance?
Excactly. So, at one point in time, 10 miles from anywhere could mean 10 times through the universe and back to where you started through a universe with a mile diameter.
That is why there is a uniform background radiation, which are a reminiscence fr
Re:And another thing (Score:1)
IRC doesn't explain some other things.
For example, my spelling mistakes. I know there others left, but this one makes the text hard to understand.
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
>> Was space a result of the big bang or something? Was distance?
>Excactly. So, at one point in time, 10 miles from anywhere could mean 10 times through the universe and back to where you started through a universe with a mile diameter.
I find this hard to understand. Why wouldn't 10 miles be in the nothingness that is next to the big bang? Why would it have to be limited to within the bigbang/growing universe(?)?
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
If you walk for 10 miles, how far will you get? And what if you go on a circle of 1m diameter? Probably not farther than 1m. And what is if the circle has no diameter?
It is similar with space. It has a diameter (the largest distance of any two points in it), because it is wrapped around.
Except that the "circle" is 3 dimensional (or even more) and the dia
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
I probably have some conceptual flaw that's keeping me from even slightly understanding. Even if you are considering the universe as only what was contained in the big bang...but if so, I would st
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
For much the same reason that 'north' and 'south' are restricted to the Earth's surface, '10 miles' is restricted to the Universe. To speak of something as being '10 miles outside the Universe' is as meaningless as to speak of something being '10 miles north of the North Pole'.
Warning: the analogy in this post is under tension
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
So, the universe was only the space inside the big bang, and as it grew, the space within that?
Re:And another thing (Score:1)
Or if it's that the points are getting further away, then is everything getting less dense?
Re:And another thing (Score:1)
My impression is that at the moment of the "big bang" the universe was not a point-- it had some sort of volume-- there was a distance between two points inside it, and as it grew, that distance got bigger. Some light or gravity waves or whatever that was generated at the moment of the big bang has not yet gotten here from where it started-- it continues to arri
Re:And another thing (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
Let's say I'm immortal for a minute. And let's say that we know how far it is from here to the furthest edge of teh universe, call it a godzillion light years. Will I stop seeing this radiation in a godzillion years (life age of the universe notwithstanding)? Seems like you would, because that initial whumph of radiation from that godzillion light years away, well there was nothing beyond that when
*head explodes*
Re:And another thing (Score:1)
Re:And another thing (Score:2)
Re:And another thing (Score:1)
My curious cat (Score:5, Funny)
Re:My curious cat (Score:2)
Re:Gravity doesn't effect me (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Gravity doesn't effect me (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Gravity doesn't effect me (Score:1)
Re:Gravity doesn't effect me (Score:1)
Re:Gravity doesn't effect me (Score:2)
Also effect = to bring about (e.g. 'to effect change' as distinct from 'to affect change', i.e. to influence the type of change). And also, affect = to take on (e.g. 'to affect a lisp').
Re:Gravity doesn't effect me (Score:1)
Re: Gravity doesn't effect me (Score:1)
Gravity waves != gravitational waves (Score:5, Informative)
Allright, IAAP (I Am A Psysicist), and I think it's good two debunk a common misconception here:
Gravity waves are not the same as gravitational waves
Gravity waves are matter density waves in fluidi (fluids or gases) caused by the interaction of two forces: bouyancy and gravity. Here, bouyancy is the upward-driving force, and gravity is the downward-driving force. The essence is that these waves require a medium to propagate (e.g. air).
Gravity waves can be found in the atmosphere, e.g. clouds which form in regular bands of cloud and clear sky, where the gravity waves carry momentum and energy from the troposphere to the middle and upper atmosphere Gravity waves can also be found on the surface of fuilds: think of the waves behind a boat. A good primer on gravity waves can be found here [physics.uwo.ca]
Gravitational waves are a whole different ballgame! These waves have got nothing to do with matter densities as they don't require a medium to progagate: it is not matter that moves, and in that respect gravitational waves are like light (which, contrary to beliefs held at the beginnning of the century, don't require a medium such as "ether"). Gravitational waves are wacves in the spacetime-metric.
So what the hell does that mean? Well, in gravity waves, there is a wave in space (and time) in which the thing that changes over space and time is the density of matter. In gravitational waves, there also is a wave in space and time, but the thing that "wiggles" is not the density of matter (or the strength of electric and magnetic fields, like in light or EM radiation in general), but the properties of the fabric of space and time itself. You can think of it as if the coordinate system itself wiggles, so to speak. This "wiggling" results in the length of the arms of e.g. the LIGO [caltech.edu] interferometer to change ever so slightly, causing a phase shift between light beams send through both arms, which can (hopefully) be detected.
In more mathematical terms, the exact properties of space and time are called the metric. In a portion of space without any matter, the metric is flat (called the Minkovski metric), which means that the usual laws of geometry apply. In any circumstances with matter (and thus gravity) present, these laws to do hold up!
What?!, I hear you think. Yes sir, you've been lied to in geometry class! However, you've been lied to only very, very slightly. Example: if you measure the radius of a sphere (say: R), you expect to find a surface area of exactly 4/3 * pi * R^3. If the earth would be a perfect sphere (which it isn't), and you would be able to measure its radius and surface very accurately, you would find that the surface area is ever so slightly smaller than expected. Or, in other words, the radius seems to be a bit too large (in the order of 3 cm or 30 cm IIRC). Read more about space time curvature here [physicspost.com]/
A primer on gravitational waves can be found here [uiuc.edu]. A more detailed description here [lanl.gov].
Re:Gravity waves != gravitational waves (Score:2, Funny)
When I finished geometry, I expected to find the surface area of a sphere [mathleague.com] to be exactly 4*pi*R^2.
Re:Gravity waves != gravitational waves (Score:1)
Re:Gravity waves != gravitational waves (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Pretender? (Score:1)
although given you're posting as AC i'd say there's a 50/50 chance your post is total nonsense : P
Re:Gravity waves != gravitational waves (Score:2)
Re:Gravity waves != gravitational waves (Score:2)
More Information [blat.info]
Re:Gravity waves != gravitational waves (Score:1)
Gravitational waves are waves in the spacetime-metric.
Wouldn't that make the metric negative in the vicinity of the source? What is the meaning of that? Its theoretical consequences?
Call me a Platonist if you will, but I'm under the impression that, if it's negative, it ain't a metric.
I have a question. (Score:2, Interesting)
Disclaimer: I am not a physicists, just a guy who likes science.
Re:I have a question. (Score:2, Informative)
That wouldn't matter. The amount of gravity affecting a orbiting spacecraft isn't much lower than on earths surface. The whole concept of orbiting requires gravity (the craft falls around the planet).
Even far away from the planet the lab would still be inside the gravitational field of the sun.
So to compensate for gravity you would need to place the lab in interstellar space, however
Re:I have a question. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I have a question. (Score:1)
Re:I have a question. (Score:2, Informative)
Why couldn't we put this lab in orbit?
The main reason is that the effect is so weak. A mission concept called LISA [caltech.edu] is being studied by ESA and NASA. The idea is to have 6 spacecraft orbiting the Sun, which together form a interferometer several million kilometers in size. The catch: Because the waves are so weak, the distances between these spacecraft would need to be controlled to within about a nanometer (!) to have any hope of detecting a signal. Needless to say a VERY challenging mission.
A lo
Re:I have a question. (Score:1)
Because "microgravity" does not mean "a minimum of gravity".
Lost me towards the middle (Score:1, Interesting)
And if they can make this idea self consistant and conform to measurements, good for them.
But this has a feeling of sloppiness to it. ie: we cannot explain this coherently with 4 dimensions, so we take what we can't figure out and hide it within the complexities of additional dimensions.
Could it be possible that explaining gravity is beyond the scope of our current mod
Re:Lost me towards the middle (Score:1)
1) How does one combine quantum mechanics and gravity?
2) what is gravity so weak compared with the other forces?
The first has only ever had one consistent theory, and that is string theory (or more recently the still somewhat ill-defined m-theory). superstring theory is the only current stable string theory and it is only a consistent quantum theory in 10 dimensions. (M-theory is a limit where you see
Re:Lost me towards the middle (Score:1)
Re:Gravity what it is and what it is not. (Score:2, Informative)
The professor looked startled: "This is an unfortunate turn of events. It appears that of the two people in the world ever to have understood General Relativity, one of them has forgotten".
Anyway, thing is, General Relativity is all about the fact that the presence of mass causes the curvature
Re:Gravity what it is and what it is not. (Score:1)
It's not space-time curvature that holds us on Earth, it's gravity.
Einstein found out that there are other effects of gravity which can only be explained if gavity causes a curvature of space-time.
I'm not a physisist, but I like this part of science.
Re:Gravity what it is and what it is not. (Score:2, Informative)
Frame of Reference (Score:1)
PSU Gravity Wave research (Score:1)