DeiRenDopa
Master Poster
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2008
- Messages
- 2,582
Huh?You can't blame me for simple confusion when even DRD doesn't seem to buy the whole inflation thing.
Did you mis-read (again)? Or is this something rather less ethical?
Huh?You can't blame me for simple confusion when even DRD doesn't seem to buy the whole inflation thing.
No, but there was nothing about "physics in general" that requires the existence of any form of exotic matter and you don't seem the least bit willing to rethink your position even after it failed a major 'test'?
Er no. Inflation is "dead". It no longer exists in nature even if we belief you that it once did exist in nature. It cannot ever be demonstrated 'empirically' because you killed it.
Dark energy isn't "measurable" here in the solar system according to your theory, so it too is beyond our ability to ever "test". It's evidently really shy around anything that is gravitationally bound, and humans, well, we're gravitation bound to pretty much everything we get close to.
That leaves us with only one thing that might actually show up in a real science experiment here on Earth, your "dark matter" friend. Unfortunately for you, he too has been a "no show" to date. In fact all SUSY theories have so far failed to show up in the lab. So where now does that leave you in terms of empirical physics?
How would you suggest we even go about trying to test dark energy here on Earth?
I wouldn't be inclined to simply "throw it out" anymore than you threw out the BB theory based on SN data. I wouldn't however be inclined to simply stuff it full of ad hoc nonsense just to make it fit.
All it tells me is that the model needs work. It doesn't justify my stuffing it full of "metaphysical baggage" just to hammer out a decent fit!
I don't have to "pretend" anything. If it's the 'best' empirical option that I have to work with at the moment without resorting to "pretend entities", I suppose I'll have to live with it for the time being. If however it can be tweaked to fit the observations more closely, without interjecting metaphysics, then it's certainly worth modifying the model.
That solar wind and those million degree loops tell me it's right. I know it's right because that has actually been "lab tested".
Nothing goes "bang" without inflation ben. No 'bang", no "background". You're ignoring the question because you don't like the implication of the question.
But ben, if something didn't put the "bang" in the big bang theory, you wouldn't have anything to look at in the first place!
You guys are the ones that cannot even seem to agree on anything. You can't blame me for simple confusion when even DRD doesn't seem to buy the whole inflation thing.
It's logically impossible to test for a dead and gone (inflation) deity in the present moment regardless of your budget! How would we even test "dark energy' ben if it's shy around anything and everything that is gravitationally bound? You've created *IMPOSSIBLE* things to even test for in the present moment. When your theory does fail (like the DM test), do you even acknowledge it?
Since we could say the same thing about the topic of God, how exactly does your "science" differ from religion Tim?
On the contrary, dark energy is firmly rooted in the known laws of physics,....
First, dark energy is constrained by observation, which makes it empirical.
Second, dark energy is constrained by the fundamental laws of physics, by which I mean, for example, that it must conserve energy & momentum
and obey the laws of thermodynamics, just like everything else.
Dark energy is no more "magical" than is gravity;
Huh?
Did you mis-read (again)? Or is this something rather less ethical?
I think you're referring to the GR-based prediction of an expanding universe.Massive objects can somehow "expand" away from each other at faster than the speed of light. No specific prediction actually allows us to falsify anything related to your theory. That's really what makes it "woo". There's no logical foundation for any of it, and no logical way to falsify [it]
Cite?I thought I recalled asking you if you personally believed in "inflation".
Almost certainly (but let's see your evidence).Did I misrepresent your position?
I wouldn't be inclined to simply "throw it out" anymore than you threw out the BB theory based on SN data. I wouldn't however be inclined to simply stuff it full of ad hoc nonsense just to make it fit.
All it tells me is that the model needs work. It doesn't justify my stuffing it full of "metaphysical baggage" just to hammer out a decent fit!
I think you're referring to the GR-based prediction of an expanding universe.
One of ben's recent posts reminded me that a direct, empirical observation of the expansion of space is, indeed, at an early stage of planning (it involves some clever observations of high-z quasars, using the E-ELT, over a ten year period). An upscale version of the same thing would also provide direct, empirical evidence of DE, at considerably lower cost than ben's proposed method.
If I provide you with a reference, do you promise to read it? And ask questions about the bits you don't understand? And having read, and understood, it, do you promise to cease posting nonsense about the logical impossibility of falsifying DE?
Untrue. The Einstein field equationsWP imply quantitative relationships between acceleration and mass/energy. Those relationships have been tested by a variety of astronomical observations.No, "acceleration" is constrained by observation Tim. Acceleration is empirical. "Dark energy" is a myth and unrelated to "acceleration" in any empirical manner.
Hold on!No, "acceleration" is constrained by observation Tim. Acceleration is empirical.
Pretend I'm from Missouri, the 'Show me' state; show me (that it does not conserve energy, and that it does not conserve momentum).It does neither!Second, dark energy is constrained by the fundamental laws of physics, by which I mean, for example, that it must conserve energy & momentum
How would you know?False. Gravity has a real tangible effect on experiments on Earth. Dark energy does not. It's a giant no show in the labDark energy is no more "magical" than is gravity;
Cite?
Almost certainly (but let's see your evidence).
And I will make this prediction: you never will, until you understand things like negative pressure (e.g. Casimir effect), how the Hubble relationship is derivable from GR, how the recently published Reyes et al. test of GR works, and how the recent Chu et al. lab-based test of GR works.I'm still trying to figure out how ben's proposed method isn't a "dark energy of the gaps" argument in the final analysis. It seems to be predicated on excluding all other known options, but doesn't actually demonstrate a direct cause/effect relationship between "Dark energy" and "acceleration". I don't see the empirical cause/effect connection between "observed acceleration" and "dark energy" in ben's proposal.
Or, to say it another way, until you trade in your Aristotelian physics glasses for Newtonian ones.
I am impressed by your response, thank you Michael.I doubt I could find the conversation again without spending all day on it. As I recall it had something to do with quintessence?, but I could be mistaken. I will simply accept that I was wrong if you actually believe in inflation.
I do find it a little amusing that you need me to cite something for you to to be sure that I misquoted you.
If I misquoted you, I apologize.
Even rose tinted glasses would be an improvement![]()
I'll be happy to read it. I'm still trying to figure out how ben's proposed method isn't a "dark energy of the gaps" argument in the final analysis. It seems to be predicated on excluding all other known options, but doesn't actually demonstrate a direct cause/effect relationship between "Dark energy" and "acceleration". I don't see the empirical cause/effect connection between "observed acceleration" and "dark energy" in ben's proposal.
Heard of the Pound-Rebka experiment MM?Actually I'd prefer GR without the metaphysics myself, but alas you don't do "real" (as in empirically real) GR anymore.![]()
That is just idiotic.IOh joy, I can hardly wait.Start with explaining exactly what you intended to add to a perfect vacuum to achieve 'negative pressure".
You folks always run from that question. Why is that?
.yes
No