Quite a few posts by Farsight today, several with some meaty responses; thanks Farsight.
Four quick follow-ons:
DeiRenDopa said:
You turn the clock over, and you undo the screws and take the back off to reveal the mechanism called a “motion”. You see cogs moving, not time flowing.
Not very helpful, and I don't know why you even bothered to waste your time writing this.
Several types of clock without cogs have already been mentioned in this thread (so your response is hardly complete), and you've not addressed my comments concerning "motion"^.
To be concrete, take a radioisotope clock. How do you "look inside" such a clock? Once you've looked inside one, how do you "look at what it actually does measure"?
I don’t know of any actual radioisotope clocks. Certain radioactive isotopes with a known half-life are used for dating, and these are referred to as clocks, but they aren’t clocks in the usual sense.
I am tempted, sorely, to quote your own words back to you, Farsight (about doing some simple research).
Anyway, all we need, for the purposes of this part of the current discussion, is a clock which a) measures time the same as a parallel-light clock, a P-LC (i.e. keeps synchronized with such a P-LC, when the two are co-located), and b) does not rely on "some form of electromagnetic device" (whether "to time the light's travel time" or anything else).
Here is a (possibly incomplete) outline of just such a (radioisotope) clock (RIC, for short):
* a quantity of a radioisotope with well-understood properties (esp. half-life) is sitting on top of whatever emits the light pulse in the P-LC
* decays of this isotope are recorded, continuously, with a counter (the RIC counter)
* whatever triggers the P-LC to emit its first light-pulse also triggers (or perhaps resets) the RIC counter
* whatever registers the return of the first light-pulse also triggers a read-out of the RIC counter
* the difference between the two RIC counter readings is directly related to the time between the first and second readings
* it is, obviously, a measure of the same time interval as that between the emission and return of the first light pulse, in the P-LC
* calibration of the RIC is done by a device which measures the quantity of radioisotope
As the spontaneous decay of radioisotopes can occur due to several different mechanisms - some of which do not involve the electromagnetic force at all - a judicious choice of radioisotope, for use in the RIC, will ensure that the clock 'ticks' without any "motion" and without any electromagnetic waves.
There is at least one other kind of clock which 'ticks' without any "motion" and without any electromagnetic waves, a muon clock (MC). In many ways a MC works much like a RIC, though there are considerable differences in how to make one!
I cannot supply evidence for the absence of evidence to support the Hawking radiation hypothesis. Nor can I supply evidence to support the lack of evidence for fairies.
Of course you can't.
And I'm not so silly as to have asked for such evidence.
Here's what you claimed (I added bold): "
There's no evidence for Hawking radiation, and yet it's bandied about as if it's settled science."
So, where is the evidence that the existence for Hawking radiation is "
bandied about as if it's settled science"?
Clear now?
Rhetorical question: why do you, apparently, have so much difficulty understanding the simple, straight-forward questions I ask? I mean, it would seem - based on many posts, by others, in this thread that those others do not have such difficulties.
I'll start more slowly, with just one, simple, question: what "electromagnetic waves" do you get by the annihilation of an electron and a positron?
It depends on their relative motion, but the typical result is two 511keV electromagnetic waves emitted in opposite directions. See for example
this picture.
Thanks.
I understand the relevant, hard, objective, experimental results to be consistent with the annihilation of an electron and a positron producing (typically) two 511keV
photons.
In what respect(s) do you think these two photons behave like electromagnetic waves?
ETA: also, if you wouldn't mind, do you understand what Farsight has written (Impedance is an electrical property of say a cable, but it applies to space too, which electromagnetic waves propagate through. It applies to alternating current rather than direct current, these both being associated with conduction current, which is the motion of charged particles. You can create such charged particles via pair production, and get the electromagnetic waves back again via annihilation. Those electromagnetic waves are displacement current rather than conduction current, and they wave. They're alternating.)?
I would urge all readers to follow the links to verify that I’m referring to robust experimental physics, and that I haven’t written anything mysterious or unusual.
Several readers apparently have done just what you ask here, and have said (in effect) that what you wrote is indeed at least somewhat mysterious or unusual (or both).
^ nor others'