temporalillusion
Technical Admin
Tell him about negative temperature. Maybe he'll explode from rage and leave the forum in peace.
Lol awesome, consider my mind blown!
Tell him about negative temperature. Maybe he'll explode from rage and leave the forum in peace.
No, there is no area in the experiment that experiences ''negative pressure"! The whole thing can be done in virtually *any* positive pressure environment and we can't even make a "pure vacuum" with *no pressure", let alone "negative pressure".
Now your just confusing force with pressure. The "force" is actually coming from the *outside* of the plates. Anything inside the plates is due to molecular attraction. There is no "negative pressure" involved.
Hoy. No. We are left with *subatomic pressure* in the form of EM carrier fields. I botched my explanation to Derek by using the term "magnetic plates" when I meant "metallic plates", but the rest is valid. The whole reason that the type of material is relevant is because EM fields have unique effects on many metallic objects like steel. This tells us the carrier particles involved, but it has nothing whatsoever to do with "negative pressure".
Why do they report "magnetic reconnection"? Beats me. Pressure and force are not the same. I have have positive pressure in the chamber and "directional force" that pushes the plates together. That's all that is happening here.
I was only trying to use the idea as an *analogy* and all that did is create pure confusion. As I noted earlier on several occasions, the WIKI explanation is quite valid. Where does it say "negative pressure" exactly in that article by the way?
Those arrows are in fact "pressure". There is "more pressure" on the outside of the plates, and 'less pressure" between them, but even the subatomic process is based on "more kinetic energy on the outside and less of it on the inside". It's all positive kinetic pressure, even at the subatomic level. There is simply "more force" outside the places than inside the plates due to "positive kinetic pressure".
The term "negative pressure" is a misleading idea, since all you are doing is "stressing' the bonds of the atoms in the liquid, much like you could also do with a solid.
It's pure stress!
It's would be like putting solid gelatin in the container and doing the same thing.
You could do that with virtually any solid too if you attached the piston to the solid.
Come on. You're changing terms as go.
First we were talking about negative pressure in a vacuum. Now you're trying to compare that to stress on bonds in a liquid. These are not the same concepts
These are two *entirely* different circumstances in the first place.
Were you intending to use a Kelvin scale or some other scale?
Lol awesome, consider my mind blown!
Well you were almost starting to get it there with “directional force”. A force, as a vector, has direction. For any direction that we ascribe as positive the opposite direction would be negative and so would a force applied through that direction. You seem to be focusing on absolutes or negative values as only less then zero. In geometry negative also denotes direction and not simply a location to the left or right of some absolute zero point. It is in fact the vector additions of these + and - directions of force that demonstrate Newton’s third law (equal and opposite reaction), as well as the conservation of energy. As has been explained to you before the repulsive forces are generally considered positive or a positive vector (along a positive radial or planar direction) making attractive forces negative.
IMO, this seems to be the problem in a nutshell. Guth (and the mainstream) is confusing "pressure" with "force". Guth's theory specifically requires "negative pressure" from a "vacuum", not an "external force". These are horses of an entirely different color.
IMO, this seems to be the problem in a nutshell. Guth (and the mainstream) is confusing "pressure" with "force".
What in the world do you think the term "pressure" actually means?
It pretty simple, actually. If you want your definition of temperature to be consistent with the laws of thermodynamics, dE = T dS, where E is the energy and S the entropy. So 1/T = dS/dE. Therefore if we can find a system in which the entropy decreases as the energy increases, it will have negative temperature.
But that's easy: consider a system of N quantum 1/2 spins in a magnetic field. The ground state is all spins aligned with the field. The total number of states is 2^N, so the maximum entropy is N log 2, and that maximum entropy state consists of the spins aligned randomly (N/2 pointed up, N/2 pointed down). But that state is plainly not the maximum energy state (all spins anti-aligned with the field is). Therefore S(E) reaches a maximum somewhere between the ground state and the maximum - and so T goes to +infinity, wraps around to -infinity, and increases from there as you increase E.
He's using exactly the same definition I've been giving to you:
[latex]$P=-\frac{\partial E}{\partial V}$[/latex]
Do you understand this definition of pressure? Do you accept it? Or do you want to use a different definition? If so, tell us what definition of pressure you want to work with. But without knowing what definition you are using (and given your denial that liquids can be at negative pressures, you're obviously not using that one), there's no chance for any common ground.
Mathematics can indeed correctly describe the physical processes of nature, but physics is a physical process that can often be very difficult if not impossible to correctly mathematically model.
Impossible for you because you can't do math.![]()
It is not even reasonable for you to be comparing a "liquid" to a "vacuum".
He's using exactly the same definition I've been giving to you:
[latex]$P=-\frac{\partial E}{\partial V}$[/latex]
Do you understand this definition of pressure? Do you accept it? Or do you want to use a different definition? If so, tell us what definition of pressure you want to work with.
No, this is another really excellent example of the idea that your side cannot distinguish between a math formula and physical reality. In physical reality a "vacuum" can achieve a zero energy state, at least in theory. It could *never* achieve a 'negative pressure' because such a concept is physically impossible. It's a mathematical mythos that Guth created because he didn't pay attention to the realm of actual "physics". There's no point in comparing "liquids", to "vacuums", but of course you'd love to simply ignore the *physical differences* between the two environments. You folks may be able to do math, but your understanding of physics is severely lacking. In the language of "physics", liquids != vacuums, and "pressure != force".
Cannot distinguish?
That is kind of the whole point, to model physical events so accurately that the mathematical results are ‘indistinguishable’ from the observed results. Just what do you think physics is anyway?
Now feeling the sun on your face, a nine volt battery on your tongue or whatever you can find at Wall-mart may be what you consider physics but that is not going to get you very far at the Large Hadron Collider.
Well, me too.Even if you do want to volunteer to stick your face in the detector array with your tongue sticking out and whatever you found at Wall-mart to see what you can detect in the collision? Most of us however, would prefer to just stick with the installed detectors and the applicable mathematics.
Ok, let's say we try....
[latex]$P=-\frac{\partial (MC^2)}{\partial V}$[/latex]
Let's not.
Translation: No Michael, don't convert energy to mass because then my confusion between pressure and force becomes damn obvious!