DeiRenDopa
Master Poster
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2008
- Messages
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The second as-yet-unaddressed of Farsight's posts.
For my own purposes, I shall call "what Farsight says is the original GR that Farsight has read" Farsight's GR, FGR for short.
Point of clarification: do Wald and/or MTW contain the "what people say GR says"?
The use of double quotes, as in ""artefacts of measurement"", by convention, means you are giving this term a meaning that is non-standard, one that is different from what a reader would normally infer.
What do you intend this term to mean, in this context?
We most certainly need to get to a clear, mutual understanding of this!
I take a hard-headed approach: time is what a clock measures. The unit of time is the second, which is defined in the relevant SI standard. Two clocks are the same - for the purpose of measuring time - if they agree, when co-located. For me, the rest is philosophical fluff that we would all be better off without.
But, if what clocks "actually do is clock up some form of regular motion", according to you, does that mean that you cannot - even in principle - build a clock based on the nuclear decay of an unstable isotope (to take one example)?
I wasn't aware that there are objective independently verifiable experimental and/or observational results about Hawking radiation.
Can you cite some please?
Noted.
How does one measure the impedance of space? And is the impedance of space the same as vacuum impedance?
I thought it was photons which created charged particles via pair production, and that particle-antiparticle annihilation produces photons.
And to study photons, we need to use QED, rather than Maxwell's equations.
What am I missing?
DeiRenDopa said:It would seem that you have rather idiosyncratic notions of what GR is, perhaps because you don't quite understand how the math relates to material things like clocks, microwave cavities, and rooms? Or perhaps it's a misunderstanding of how objective, independently verifiable experimental and observational results can be - and are - related to theories in physics (like GR)?
Nope. I've read the original GR, and the scientific evidence squares with it. However it doesn't square with what people say GR says.
For my own purposes, I shall call "what Farsight says is the original GR that Farsight has read" Farsight's GR, FGR for short.
Point of clarification: do Wald and/or MTW contain the "what people say GR says"?
No. They're just two clocks at different elevations. They're in this room. Or if you prefer, they're in space near a planet. The things we call reference frames are "artefacts of measurement" that have no physical existence.For example, you seem to think that two clocks, separated by a foot or so in elevation are (must be?) in the same reference frame; i.e. that they can both measure 'local' time and that the 'local' is the same.
The use of double quotes, as in ""artefacts of measurement"", by convention, means you are giving this term a meaning that is non-standard, one that is different from what a reader would normally infer.
What do you intend this term to mean, in this context?
And those clocks don't actually measure time. There is no time flowing through those clocks. Can you see it whooshing through? No. What they actually do is clock up some form of regular motion, and display a cumulative total that you call the time.
We most certainly need to get to a clear, mutual understanding of this!

I take a hard-headed approach: time is what a clock measures. The unit of time is the second, which is defined in the relevant SI standard. Two clocks are the same - for the purpose of measuring time - if they agree, when co-located. For me, the rest is philosophical fluff that we would all be better off without.
But, if what clocks "actually do is clock up some form of regular motion", according to you, does that mean that you cannot - even in principle - build a clock based on the nuclear decay of an unstable isotope (to take one example)?
If so, then what are the objective, independently verifiable experimental and/or observational results which are inconsistent with GR?
Hawking radiation.
I wasn't aware that there are objective independently verifiable experimental and/or observational results about Hawking radiation.
Can you cite some please?
Gravitational lensing.So far all I've seen you present is "optical clocks at different elevations don't stay synchronized" (that's a shorthand).
You've also alluded to "the GPS clock adjustment and the Shapiro delay"; what else?
Noted.
Impedance is an electrical property of say a cable, but it applies to space too, which electromagnetic waves propagate through.But my question was, and still is, what is it about vacuum impedance that "mentioned before now"? How is it relevant?
How does one measure the impedance of space? And is the impedance of space the same as vacuum impedance?
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 thought it was photons which created charged particles via pair production, and that particle-antiparticle annihilation produces photons.
And to study photons, we need to use QED, rather than Maxwell's equations.
What am I missing?
