PixyMisa
Persnickety Insect
Wrong question.I seem to remember various other folk not answering questions, I asked a simple question about energy, what was your answer again?
What is energy? (not what does it do)
Wrong question.I seem to remember various other folk not answering questions, I asked a simple question about energy, what was your answer again?
What is energy? (not what does it do)
yy2bggggs You misunderstand, the strong interaction is the same as strong nuclear or color force. The force's bosons are gluons and these act on quarks. The secondary or residual nuclear force is much weaker and its bosons are mesons. These act on nucleons.It's my understanding that the residual nuclear force is the strong force. See strong interactionWP.
I'm not sure about this one. Keep in mind the earth is quite massive and spinning, so it's not to be compared to, say, a comet.
I remain unconvinced here. The fact that force carrying particles have energy does not mean that force is energy. The mouse pad sitting on my desk is applying a constant force to the earth, and the earth is applying a constant force back. But I can't use this constant force to do an indefinite amount of work, so it's not energy.
Thanks, yes. This was wrong. I meant to say wave function, not waveform.
Sure!
yy2bggggs You misunderstand, the strong interaction is the same as strong nuclear or color force. The force's bosons are gluons and these act on quarks. The secondary or residual nuclear force is much weaker and its bosons are mesons. These act on nucleons.It's my understanding that the residual nuclear force is the strong force. See strong interactionWP.
I'm not sure about this one. Keep in mind the earth is quite massive and spinning, so it's not to be compared to, say, a comet.
I remain unconvinced here. The fact that force carrying particles have energy does not mean that force is energy. The mouse pad sitting on my desk is applying a constant force to the earth, and the earth is applying a constant force back. But I can't use this constant force to do an indefinite amount of work, so it's not energy.
Thanks, yes. This was wrong. I meant to say wave function, not waveform.
Sure!
Yes.
No.
What is a singularity, and why do you think that is a meaningful question?
Wrong question.
What is a singularity, punshhh?Are we descending into the rubicon now?
Well the description of a singularity I quoted in my previous post, has a "yes", under it. So if I stick with this description for now.
No, it's because you don't understand what a singularity is. If you did, you wouldn't ask that question.The question is meaningful to me because, I am not in full position of the facts/equations by which the physicists arrived at their "singularity". The question is begging from any casual observer.
Perhaps you will enlighten me.
It is not.Yes I remember your answer to this question, I was happy with it as an answer.
It merely confirmed that what energy and consequently the energy forming matter is, is a mystery.
Matter is constituted of energy is it not?
We know matter can arise from energy but we don't yet know the how & why questions. Nothing can come out of or arise from a singularity. The Big Bang answers many questions but the singularity problem is an anomaly. There are other ways to account for the known detections such as the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB), the arise of light elements such as hydrogen and helium in the early universe, the expansion of the universe etc. I'm working on a model that can't have an early universe singularity. The QGP is a product of an early very energetic or hot environment. The aforementioned CMB proves the early universe was hot. We know that when the first photons or light took to flight the temperature was about 4,000 degrees Kelvin. What the temperatures were prior to that point is less certain but it was hotter.Yes.
No.
What is a singularity, and why do you think that is a meaningful question?
That's not exactly true, but near enough.We know matter can arise from energy but we don't yet know the how & why questions. Nothing can come out of or arise from a singularity.
What problem? What anomaly?The Big Bang answers many questions but the singularity problem is an anomaly.
Those are all accounted for by the Big Bang, and have nothing to do with any singularity.There are other ways to account for the known detections such as the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB), the arise of light elements such as hydrogen and helium in the early universe, the expansion of the universe etc.
Okay.I'm working on a model that can't have an early universe singularity.
But nowhere in there is there any mention of a singularity.The QGP is a product of an early very energetic or hot environment. The aforementioned CMB proves the early universe was hot. We know that when the first photons or light took to flight the temperature was about 4,000 degrees Kelvin. What the temperatures were prior to that point is less certain but it was hotter.
Bye.We also know that we are here! And that we need to get some sleep! Bye bye for now!
That's still the strong force. See the wiki article.yy2bggggs You misunderstand, the strong interaction is the same as strong nuclear or color force. The force's bosons are gluons and these act on quarks. The secondary or residual nuclear force is much weaker and its bosons are mesons. These act on nucleons.
wiki said:The nuclear force is now understood as a residual effect of the even more powerful strong force, or strong interaction, which is the attractive force that binds particles called quarks together, to form the nucleons themselves.
I didn't say comets, I said planets. And the context is forces that cause form. PixyMisa provided a link.Gravity is not primary in holding together planets and comets.
Indeed they are. But the form of planets is kept in place by gravity. Without gravity you won't have planets hanging around. See PixyMisa's link.These are made of molecules and these are "glued" together via covalent bonds of the electromagnetic force.
You have this backwards. I want to talk about energy, and you want to talk about Einstein's famous equation connecting mass and energy.You want to talk about potential energy while I was referring to Einstein's famous equation connecting mass and energy.
Why yes, it does.However in the E = Mc2 sense it applies to all Standard Model particles including bosons or force carriers.
What is a singularity, punshhh?
No, it's because you don't understand what a singularity is. If you did, you wouldn't ask that question.
It's like constantly asking how do triangles have kittens?
It is not.
They never said it did.Are I think we have an answer;
The QGP, did not arise in this singularity described by the physicists.
Yes. But why?or it could not conceivably have done so.
or it is nonsensical to consider that it did.
Does this cover it?
Wrong question.If not, of what is it constituted?
Nothing theoretical about it. You don't really seem to understand what I am saying. Because you keep asking for the name of the bachelor's wife.I understand your argument and I agree to a point in a theoretical situation.
Simple?However in this case though we have a quite simple physical system,
When and where do you think this "nowhere" is?which appears to have come out of nowhere.
Spacetime is itself a fabric.it makes sense to me that it requires a "fabric" out of which its forms arise, it is this fabric I am looking for.
They never said it did.
Yes. But why?
Wrong question.
Nothing theoretical about it. You don't really seem to understand what I am saying. Because you keep asking for the name of the bachelor's wife.
Ok, this means that matter and energy emerged from itself presumably by the process known as inflation.
This would also mean that the initial state perhaps the QGP was part of an existing state.
Fine so we have sort of by passed the big bang scenario(at least with a singularity)
Simple?
If you think so then you probably don't understand it.
simple in the sense that there are only a few things to consider, matter, energy, spacetime and some x perhaps.
When and where do you think this "nowhere" is?
I am positing a nowhere as the alternative answer in order to frame the question.
Spacetime is itself a fabric.
Yes, I have been waiting for someone to state this and explain how matter is manifest in this fabric.
But suppose you could find this other "fabric".
Do you think that you could know what it is?
No, but what it represents in the scheme of things.
Wrong question.What is matter?