I'm the one cutting down quacks here sol.
Besides, nobody's listening to you any more anyway. Your credibility is shot to pot.
He's hiding behind mathematics because I whupped his ass in a physics discussion.
No, the onus is on you to explain yourself instead of trying to hide behind mathematical expressions where you won't define the terms and you won't give the scenario. I gave an honest answer, but all we get from you is pompous guff like clearly, you lack such basic knowledge. Pah, you're faking it. You won't give the scenario because you're afraid I'll rip it apart.
This is a class, sol, but I'm teaching you.
Huff puff, sol really doesn't like it when I explain the gravitational field with reference to Einstein. He behaves like a witchdoctor faced with a pharmacist, all outraged, saying "you don't understand it". Tough. I do.
I told you how it works. Get used to it. It isn't in your textbooks yet, but it will be.
I understand this sol, you don't.
It's cargo-cult science, and I will not permit it.
...snip...
I'm arguing for relativity. It's the sleeping beauty of contemporary physics. And I'm doing my bit for physics because this is important. More imporatant than you know. Must dash.
I'm not wrong about this RC. Note the ominous silence and the evasion from your "friends". They don't have the honesty to tell you that Actually, RC, Farsight is right about this.
I'm not confusing anything.
...snip...
I'm not conflating anything. It's all perfectly simple.
I understand it.
...snip...
And I'm not wrong. I would urge you to ask elsewhere to check what I'm saying. Then you'll understand something important about some of the other posters here.
My "claim" is correct.
Anyway, I think this thread has run its course guys. I hope you've found it useful, and that some of your have learned some physics.
This thread is getting increasingly bizarre. It's just like talking to creationists.
It is exactly like trying to talk to a creationist.
This conversation is *EXACTLY* like arguing with creationists.
Yep, this is *EXACTLY* like arguing with creationists.
You're EXACTLY like arguing with a creationist that INSISTS "God did it" through some process that has absolutely NOTHING to do with "God".
Haters are like creationists.
In other words, just like any good creationist, you absolutely, positively refuse to provide ANY kind of published work to support your OUTRAGEOUS claims,
You keep handwaving away, attacking the individual, refusing to address my questions and acting like any good creationist.
It's really frustrating arguing with creationists and EU haters that refuse to educate themselves and that are too cheap and too lazy to read a related textbook. After awhile I guess I start shouting.![]()
EU haters argue like creationists.
It's irrational absurd behavior on par with the very WORST type of denial based "creationist" beliefs.
Are you for real? It isn't false, and it is connected to reality and math. Go and read up on a manifold.
Don't be facile. The reality of gravitational fields forbids all finite regions from being flat.
In other words, the probability that the core of Relativity+ is true if the experiment observes photons is just the same as the original probability that the core of Relativity+ is true. In other words, the observation of photons is not evidence for the core of Relativity+.
Not at all. The geodesic dome is an idiotic way of trying to say local regions are flat. Even a blind man can see that the curvature has been bundled into the infinitestimal intervening regions. Some of the other guys here know it, but won't let on because they're dishonest. For example Clinger knows it, but he won't address the issue and hurls ad-hominem abuse as a distraction instead. It's never been a particularly sincere discussion, but now it's gone totally downhill so there's no mileage in continuing it.After all this, your argument is defeated by a geodesic dome?
Not at all. The geodesic dome is an idiotic way of trying to say local regions are flat. Even a blind man can see that the curvature has been bundled into the infinitestimal intervening regions. Some of the other guys here know it, but won't let on because they're dishonest. For example Clinger knows it, but he won't address the issue and hurls ad-hominem abuse as a distraction instead. It's never been a particularly sincere discussion, but now it's gone totally downhill so there's no mileage in continuing it.
So you guys aren't going to be hustling up a black-hole and throwing stuff into it after all? I'm off then, I only came in to watch that.
Yep. But there aren't any creases in space, sol. Ever seen a gravitational field with an abrupt discontinuity in it. Er, no.sol invictus said:You asserted: "If your manifold is exactly flat locally in a region that is other than infinitesimal, it's exactly flat globally." A geodesic dome (or a cube) is exactly flat locally in a region that isn't infinitesimal, but it's not exactly flat globally, because it has curvature at the vertices.
I wasn't wrong. I was right. The geodesic dome analogy for a gravitational field is garbage, so is your waterfall chicken-little sky's falling in. And you're a busted flush with your reputation in tatters. You might huff and puff and pretend otherwise, but it's too late sol, the game is up. Have a nice day.sol invictus said:You were wrong, and I think even you know it. Admit it, learn from it, and move on. Can you do that?
Yep.sol invictus said:You asserted: "If your manifold is exactly flat locally in a region that is other than infinitesimal, it's exactly flat globally." A geodesic dome (or a cube) is exactly flat locally in a region that isn't infinitesimal, but it's not exactly flat globally, because it has curvature at the vertices.
I wasn't wrong. I was right. The geodesic dome analogy for a gravitational field is garbage
I won it edd. The argument was about the nature of black holes, and whether space is falling inwards in a gravitational field. It isn't.I'm bordering on seeing a point about the actual geometry of space time in the messy universe we live in but I've completely lost what significance it has in the broader argument and still think Farsight lost this argument long before he even got as far as perversely thinking he'd won it.
Wrong - it is still a demonstartion of your inability to understand GR and a simple analogy.It's still garbage RC.
Given Farsight's inability to understand this simple point about geodesic domes or cubes, should we tell him about the standard example of cones where all of the curvature is at the vertex?A geodesic dome (or a cube) is exactly flat locally in a region that isn't infinitesimal, but it's not exactly flat globally, because it has curvature at the vertices.
Oh, Farsight - the fact that cones have all of their curvature at the vertex will then really blow your mindOh sol, gravitational fields do not have creases.
!Oh sol, gravitational fields do not have creases. Stop digging.
That is what happens in GR. A manifold is made up of "patches". Each patch is intrinsically Minkowskian ("flat"). The mathematical statement of this looks like "A manifold M with affine connection is said to be locally flat if for every point p in M there is a chart (U; x^i) with such that all the components of the connection vanish throughout U. This implies of course both torsion tensor and curvature tensor vanish throughout U, ..." (Modern Mathematical Physics: Groups, Hilbert Space and Differential Geometry by Peter Szekere).
Oh, Farsight - the fact that cones have all of their curvature at the vertex will then really blow your mind!
You're lying, as Clinger already pointed out:
Farsight: "When spacetime is flat, no gravitational field is present."
Einstein: "the Γτμν...are the components of the gravitational field."
Γτμν is non-zero even in flat spacetime in some (actually, almost all) coordinate systems - for instance, the coordinates I've been asking you about all this time.
...snip...
You were wrong. Admit it, learn from it, move on. Can you do that?
You're completely wrong, not just about the physics, but about what Einstein said (in 1920 and at other times)....
According to Einstein gravity can exist even in perfectly flat, homogeneous spacetime. You're directly contradicting what Einstein said in 1920, Farsight....
According to Einstein, rays of light curve in perfectly flat spacetime when viewed from accelerated reference frames, because acceleration is gravity and light curves in response to gravity. Wrong again, Farsight.
Saying that it isn't a "real" gravitational field directly and explicitly contradicts Einstein, Farsight. Yes, it's true that in flat spacetime one can choose coordinates in which there is no gravitational field. But it's also true that one can choose coordinates in which there is one, just as he says....
You're wrong. Accept it, learn from it, move on.
The principle of equivalence - understood correctly - is indeed exact. Saying "it's a principle" as though it were only meant as an approximation or guideline is laughable. In GR, spacetime is locallyLorentzianflat, and as far as the clocks in my thought-experiment go, the deviations we expect due to tidal forces can be made negligible with an appropriate experimental setup.
I'd like to say I'm astonished that Farsight has equated local flatness and global flatness... but I'm not.
Aaagh! That only happens in an infinitesimal region. The locally flat region has zero extent!
If your manifold is exactly flat locally in a region that is other than infinitesimal, it's exactly flat globally. It's like saying this part of the surface of the earth is exactly flat. Absolutely utterly flat. And the next part, and the next, and all other parts. Then the surface of the earth isn't a sphere any more, it's a flat plane. It isn't curved at all.
Albert Einstein said:[latex]
\[
\frac{d^2 x_\tau}{d s^2} = \Gamma^{\tau}_{\mu\nu}
\frac{d x_{\mu}}{ds} \frac{d x_{\nu}}{ds}
\hbox{\hspace{24pt}(46)}
\]
[/latex]
It's all right there in black and white for anyone to read, Farsight - you made false assertions, you arrogantly defended them, now you're directly contradicting your own previous assertions while denying you're doing so and declaring victory.
What's next? Are you going to bite our ankles?
The quote from Szekeres was from another forum. It looked reasonable according to my limited knowledge of the mathematics but I suspect there are more details hidden in the ellipsis.It doesn't make much sense for Szekeres to define local flatness in such a way that local flatness is equivalent to global flatness, so I suspect that Szekeres made a mistake in his definition. Can you provide a more specific citation and/or context?
No I did nothing of the sort. I said a gravitational field was only flat in an infinitesimal region. Then RC tried to say I was wrong by likening it to a geodesic dome where finite regions are truly flat and the Riemann curvature is bundled into the place where two flat regions meet. It's garbage and you know it, and your howls of outraged accusation don't conceal that it's garbage.It's all right there in black and white for anyone to read, Farsight - you made false assertions, you arrogantly defended them, now you're directly contradicting your own previous assertions while denying you're doing so and declaring victory. What's next? Are you going to bite our ankles?
No it isn't. It's a demonstration of your inability to understand GR and a simple analogy.Wrong - it is still a demonstration of your inability to understand GR and a simple analogy.
It's garbage RC. Go and look at a gravitational field. It isn't plated with little flat patches. It's curved.You labor under the delusion that each of the flat patches of a geodesic dome in the analogy is
Anyone who has seen a geodesic dome knows that
- Oriented to be paralell to an imaginary plane.
- And (maybe) has moved to be actually on that plane.
- Thus the entire dome is flat.
- Each patch is locally flat without any reference to an external space, e.g. draw a triangle in the patch and it's internal angles will sum up to 180 degrees.
- The dome is globally curved. Draw a triangle that covers multiple patches and and it's internal angles will not sum up to 180 degrees.
And each patch is infinitesimal in extent!That is what happens in GR. A manifold is made up of "patches". Each patch is intrinsically Minkowskian ("flat"). The mathematical statement of this looks like "A manifold M with affine connection is said to be locally flat if for every point p in M there is a chart (U; x^i) with such that all the components of the connection vanish throughout U. This implies of course both torsion tensor and curvature tensor vanish throughout U, ..." (Modern Mathematical Physics: Groups, Hilbert Space and Differential Geometry by Peter Szekere). Here a chart is one of the patches we have been talking about.
No, it's because the local flatness is only an approximation. It isn't actually flat. It's just so nearly flat that you can't detect the curvature that's there. Come on RC, think it through. You're in a room and you measure g to be 9.8 m/s at both the floor and at the ceiling. What do think happens when you go upstairs? Do you think you measure g to be 9.799999 m/s at both the floor and ceiling? And then when you go upstairs again do you think you measure g to be 9.799998 m/s at both the floor and ceiling? No way. That's the equivalent of your geodesic dome, and it's garbage.Spacetime remains curved despite the local "flatness" because the curvature is global.
Tell me anything you like. Take a vertical slice through the cone and what you've got is this: V. That's locally flat rather than curved. But gravitational fields aren't like that. The force of gravity diminishes with distance. The gradient diminishes. It isn't constant like in the / on one side of the V which is a slice through the cone.Given Farsight's inability to understand this simple point about geodesic domes or cubes, should we tell him about the standard example of cones where all of the curvature is at the vertex?
It's the wrong example. And the upturned-hat plot of gravitational potential is easy to visualise anyhow, plus it matches the ubiquitous rubber-sheet depictions of curved spacetime.FYI, Farsight: Curvature for a cone is given as an example in GR classes because it is easy to visualize.
Tell me something I don't know.The first thing to realize is that a cone is equivalent to a plane with a slice cut out of it so you can flatten out a cone into a plane by making a cut from the vertex.
Forget the vertex. It's irrelevant to this discussion. And don't try to put up a smokescreen, because it won't do you any good.Lecturers introduce the concept of parallel transport. Basically this is a manifold equipped with way of moving a tangent vector defined at one point along a path. This path can return to the original point, i.e. a closed path. The question then becomes: Is the transported vector the same as the original vector? The answer is that it depends! Consider the cone and a closed path that encloses the vertex. That means that the path has to jump across the slice in the equivalent plane representation. On each side of the slice the tangent vector will point at the vertex but it's direction will change. Thus the transported vector is different from the original vector for a closed path that encloses the vertex.
Only gravitational fields aren't cones. They have Riemann curvature. Because of the inverse square rule. If they were cones the vertex is inaccessible and irrelevant in the centre of the gravitating body, and the force of gravity due to that body doesn't diminish with distance. Instead gravitational fields are like flared bells. Or like curvy upturned hats with a wide brim. They aren't like dunces hats. How much simpler do I have to I make this before you stop embarrassing yourself?Consider the cone and a closed path that excludes the vertex. The transported and original vectors are the same.
Any change in the tangent vector is interpreted as curvature, e.g. the steeper the sides of the cone, the wider the slice and the larger the curvature. Thus a cone has global curvature but is locally flat. Global means that you consider every single bit of the cone including the vertex. Local means a neighbourhood of a point. In the case of a cone it is any neighbourhood that does not include the vertex.
No I did nothing of the sort. I said a gravitational field was only flat in an infinitesimal region. Then RC tried to say I was wrong by likening it to a geodesic dome where finite regions are truly flat and the Riemann curvature is bundled into the place where two flat regions meet. It's garbage and you know it, and your howls of outraged accusation don't conceal that it's garbage.