by Chris Peterson » Sun Jul 02, 2023 7:42 pm
johnnydeep wrote: ↑Sun Jul 02, 2023 7:26 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 8:04 pm
johnnydeep wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 7:33 pm
Just to be clear, the outspiraling Moon is also giving rise to GWs, right? That is, there's acceleration happening there too.
And I presume that "decretion" of matter such as what occurs when stars blow off their layers for various reasons will also cause GW?
There is acceleration happening anytime a body isn't moving in a straight line.
If a body blows off mass in a spherically symmetric way, it won't create gravitational radiation.
Alright. Perhaps I'll have to not understand that. If the body blowing off mass is doing so symmetrically (spherically or maybe radially in a single plane?) IT won't experience any acceleration, but the blown off matter certainly will, and so, won't IT create GWs?
It's not a matter of what individual particles are doing. You need to look at the system, which is a spherically symmetric, non-varying mass. That is true if it pulses in and out in size (which some bodies actually do). If you want the gruesome details, you can check out
Birkhoff's theorem, which describes spherically symmetric cases in GR.
Finally, one last hypothetical: if a body blows off matter symmetrically and that matter falls back symmetrically, I might guess that the main body would emit GWs due solely to the fluctuation in mass. But that's probably not right either. It's back to the "attempt to understand GWs" drawing board for me!
Again, there is no "main body", there's just a spherically symmetric mass which is oscillating while maintaining that symmetry. Not sure it's physically accurate, but by analogy you could imagine that if you're observing this from a distance, a blob of mass moving towards you is exactly offset by a blob of the same mass moving away from you.
[quote=johnnydeep post_id=332022 time=1688326003 user_id=132061]
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=332005 time=1688241883 user_id=117706]
[quote=johnnydeep post_id=332003 time=1688240038 user_id=132061]
Just to be clear, the outspiraling Moon is also giving rise to GWs, right? That is, there's acceleration happening there too.
And I presume that "decretion" of matter such as what occurs when stars blow off their layers for various reasons will also cause GW?
[/quote]
There is acceleration happening anytime a body isn't moving in a straight line.
If a body blows off mass in a spherically symmetric way, it won't create gravitational radiation.
[/quote]
Alright. Perhaps I'll have to not understand that. If the body blowing off mass is doing so symmetrically (spherically or maybe radially in a single plane?) IT won't experience any acceleration, but the blown off matter certainly will, and so, won't IT create GWs?[/quote]
It's not a matter of what individual particles are doing. You need to look at the system, which is a spherically symmetric, non-varying mass. That is true if it pulses in and out in size (which some bodies actually do). If you want the gruesome details, you can check out [url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birkhoff%27s_theorem_(relativity)"]Birkhoff's theorem[/url], which describes spherically symmetric cases in GR.
[quote]Finally, one last hypothetical: if a body blows off matter symmetrically and that matter falls back symmetrically, I might guess that the main body would emit GWs due solely to the fluctuation in mass. But that's probably not right either. It's back to the "attempt to understand GWs" drawing board for me!
[/quote]
Again, there is no "main body", there's just a spherically symmetric mass which is oscillating while maintaining that symmetry. Not sure it's physically accurate, but by analogy you could imagine that if you're observing this from a distance, a blob of mass moving towards you is exactly offset by a blob of the same mass moving away from you.