sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
Here's a well-written little anecdote our local crackpots might benefit from reading:
http://www.edge.org/q2008/q08_9.html#carroll
http://www.edge.org/q2008/q08_9.html#carroll
.If you believe that, you don't believe in general relativity. The inevitability of the formation of black holes when the total energy within a region reaches a certain cutoff (and it doesn't matter what form the energy takes - adding magnetic fields makes it worse) can be proven rigorously.
Do you believe in GR?
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I don't believe that Carlqvist and Alfvén's model of plasma cloud collapse has anything to do with black holes, and certainly has no relationship to whether I believe in general relativity or not.
I've not said black holes are necessarily a fiction (although has anyone actually seen one?) ... just their ubiquitous use to explain away every little unexplainable observation Big Bang encounters. Especially when other physics is already available that would seem to explain those observations. Plus the fact that they now seem to number as many as stars in the heaven.![]()
Actually, general relativity did not "predict" dark energy. Lambda was actually added to the equation by Einstein in order to make the universe static. And for no other reason.
And far as it "predicting" black holes is concerned, Einstein actually said that a theory that incorporates the existance of singularities should be avoided.
One month after the black hole concept was first introduced in 1939 by Oppenheimer and a graduate student, Einstein wrote a paper ("On a stationary system with spherical symmetry consisting of many gravitating masses", Annals of Mathematics, Oct. 1939, vol 40, No 4, pp 922-936) wherein he stated (calling black holes "Schwartzschild singularities") that "The essential result of this investigation is a clear understanding as to why the ‘Schwartzschild singularities’ do not exist in physical reality."
And here is what Einstein wrote in 1945 (Albert Einstein, The Meaning of Relativity) regarding the big-bang singularity: "Theoretical doubts [concerning the creation of the universe] are based on the fact that [at the] beginning of the expansion, the metric becomes singular and the density becomes infinite. . . In reality, space will probably be of a uniform character, and the present [relativity] theory will be valid only as a limiting case. . . One may not therefore assume the validity of the equations for very high density of field and of matter, and one may not conclude that the 'beginning of the expansion' must mean a singularity in the mathematical sense. All we have to realize is that the equations may not be continued over such regions."
So it's probably inaccurate to claim GR predicted black holes or BBC.![]()
No, you need only adopt either Narlikar's QSSC or SCC cosmology. Both still adhere to GR but both do not require a BB or ubiquitous BHs.![]()
Here's a well-written little anecdote our local crackpots might benefit from reading:
http://www.edge.org/q2008/q08_9.html#carroll
One month after the black hole concept was first introduced in 1939 by Oppenheimer and a graduate student, Einstein wrote a paper ("On a stationary system with spherical symmetry consisting of many gravitating masses", Annals of Mathematics, Oct. 1939, vol 40, No 4, pp 922-936) wherein he stated (calling black holes "Schwartzschild singularities") that "The essential result of this investigation is a clear understanding as to why the ‘Schwartzschild singularities’ do not exist in physical reality."
As MattusMaximus has already pointed out, black holes were predicted well before you seem to think they were. However, I should also point out that this quote is technically correct. Schwartzschild singularities do not exist in physical reality. The reason for this is very simple - conservation of angular momentum. A Schwartzschild black hole does not rotate. Since it is essentially impossible to have any collection of matter with zero angular momentum, and even if such a thing happened, the first interaction with anything else would spoil it. Schwartzschild black holes are theoretically possible under general relativity, but can't actually happen in the real world.
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I think you're not far wrong. The magnetic field in a plasma cloud may stop gravitational collapse. This was investigated by Per Carlqvist in 1988, resulting in the eponymous Carlqvist Relation, peer reviewed in (ref, full text). As Carlqvist and Hannes Alfvén mention in another paper, the magnetic field may either counteract, or aid the contraction of cloud resulting in a pinch.
is what the abstract for the linked paper says.It is shown that magnetic fields, which have generally been regarded as obstructing the condensation of interstellar clouds, will promote the contraction of such clouds under certain conditions and may even constitute the main mechanism for contraction.
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I don't believe that Carlqvist and Alfvén's model of plasma cloud collapse has anything to do with black holes, and certainly has no relationship to whether I believe in general relativity or not.
It does look like their paper is based on known laboratory physics of plasmas, and they have made their case quite rigorously.
.You claimed magnetic fields can stop gravitational collapse.
Sorry Ian, but how does that allow the plasmoid to overcome gravity and where does the energy come from to maintain against gravity.
The issue is that the mass of the plasmoid will still cause it to contract, and at some point it has to get more energy to sustain against the pull of gravity.
Now, it may be that while magnetic fields counteract gravitational collapse, they may not be able to prevent it; once grain sizes increase, gravity certainly plays the dominant role. But magnetic plasmas whose particle size is less than grains, electromagnetic forces dominate. Period. (See Gravitoelectrodynamics)
Uh, the abstract talks about magnetic fields causing a collapse, not maintaining a plasmoid against gravitational collapse.
You can't escape the black hole, light has been demonstrated to be bent by gravity, if you bend it enough you have a black hole.
.Actually it's not like that. Gravity acts on all forms of energy. There is no way to add energy to prevent gravitational collapse - once you are close to the bound, adding energy (of any form) makes the problem worse, not better.
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I stand corrected. It just occurred to me that you are referring to "Gravitational Collapse" of a massive body, whereas I was discussing the collapse, gravitationally, of a plasma cloud (a non-massive body).
Actually it's not like that. Gravity acts on all forms of energy. There is no way to add energy to prevent gravitational collapse - once you are close to the bound, adding energy (of any form) makes the problem worse, not better.
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Originally Posted by iantresman
Now, it may be that while magnetic fields counteract gravitational collapse, they may not be able to prevent it; once grain sizes increase, gravity certainly plays the dominant role. But magnetic plasmas whose particle size is less than grains, electromagnetic forces dominate. Period.
OK, that is a concrete claim for once. It's also totally wrong (as usual with plasma cosmology) - and it's wrong at a level that anybody who has studied even a little general relativity will recognize immediately.
Improvements in our knowledge of the absolute value of the Newtonian gravitational constant, G, have come very slowly over the years. Most other constants of nature are known (and some even predictable) to parts per billion, or parts per million at worst. However, G stands mysteriously alone, its history being that of a quantity which is extremely difficult to measure and which remains virtually isolated from the theoretical structure of the rest of physics. Several attempts aimed at changing this situation are now underway, but the most recent experimental results have once again produced conflicting values of G and, in spite of some progress and much interest, there remains to date no universally accepted way of predicting its absolute value.
It violates singularity theorems which have been proven rigorously (by Stephen Hawking and others).
The conditions for gravitational collapse have nothing to do with particle or "grain" sizes, or any other local characteristic of the fluid or matter in question. They are extremely simple, and depend only on the total mass in some region and the size of that region.
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I stand corrected. It just occurred to me that you are referring to "Gravitational Collapse" of a massive body, whereas I was discussing the collapse, gravitationally, of a plasma cloud (a non-massive body).
Well i have studied it (although briefly), and I see nothing wrong with that statement.
This the whole probem with gravity, it barely has any effect at a particle level at all, only on large scales, and so is very hard to test. Gravity at atom/molecule level is negligable, and only comes into play significantly when you get above dust size, so I see nothing wrong with the statement that small particles are more effected by EM forces.
Millikan made an oil drop hover by applying an electric field to it in his original experiment, making the electric force surpass the force of gravity on something as large as a oil drop. When it comes to dust size and below (until you reach the weak and strong force), EM forces really do reign supreme.
How does the fact that EM forces far dominate gravity at small scales violate singularity theorem?
Yes, those gravitational collapse equations are very simple, and dont take into account many variables. I totally agree.
I have a question that has been bugging me for a while, maybe you could answer it Sol, or anyone else.
Take a large, Isolated, nebula that is collapsing in on itself, and contains an overall charge of any value spread out across its length (lets say 20 C overall). Since it is isolated, there is no surrounding conducting medium to discharge the cloud.
Now the only thing I can see resulting from this situation is a star with a charge on it.
Now the only thing I can see resulting from this situation is a star with a charge on it. If the gravitational force is compressing the plasma to a certain size, as this happens the repulsive force of the similar charges inside the plasma will increase with time, until the compressive force of gravity equals the repulsive force of the ions, leading to a state of equilibrium where the collapsing force equals the repulsive force. I think this may be why some people think that gravity itself plays a part in 'charging' stars. Would this work? i can't think of a reason why this would not happen, given the original conditions.
How does the fact that EM forces far dominate gravity at small scales violate singularity theorem?