G'day Harryharry wrote:G'day Bystander
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If you only read 1% of the papers that I go through maybe you may get some idea.
Perhaps if you only read 1% of the papers that you go through, maybe you might get some idea.
G'day Harryharry wrote:G'day Bystander
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If you only read 1% of the papers that I go through maybe you may get some idea.
Actually those guys who built it, would not. Maybe there are tiny vibrating strings, or maybe something noone thought about yet. The whole point of LHC (as any other experimental equipment) is to break the theory; noone would build so fffffg expensive machinery only to confirm whatever we already know.astrolabe wrote:I guess the LHC has based it's entire reason for being on the info built up over the eons that particles do indeed exist, to which I totally agree and who wouldn't.
big red buttonbystander wrote:Perhaps if you only read 1% of the papers that you go through, maybe you might get some idea.
Well, yes and no. Most theories these days are actually too complex to break with any small set of experiments. They are actually made up of many smaller theoretical components, which may or may not be individually testable. Big experiments like the LHC are less about breaking theory than they are about extending theory, and about placing tighter constraints on the range of the free parameters in complex models. I don't think many researchers involved with the LHC expect any major theory to get broken; they do expect to see existing theory supported, however. It's not so much a question of confirming what we already know as it is confirming what we think we know. (That's not to say that the results couldn't turn particle physics on its head, just that they are not likely to.)makc wrote:Actually those guys who built it, would not. Maybe there are tiny vibrating strings, or maybe something noone thought about yet. The whole point of LHC (as any other experimental equipment) is to break the theory; noone would build so fffffg expensive machinery only to confirm whatever we already know.
Polarization of light is a well understood phenomenon, and concise clear descriptions of it are easy to find on the web. Here and here, fo example.astrolabe wrote:... However, when viewing objects such as hot top streets or brick sidewalks or even sand facing the sun works best. Does this particular effect tell me that partially absorbed/reflected light gets turned 90 degrees after striking the objects? Or is it the high-energy blue spectrum only that is being polarized especially where the sky is concerned because of scattering? Now throw in the slit experiment and one can see that I have a lot to think about. ...
What has that got to do with the relationship between, black holes, dark matter, and dark energy? Well They do slate Harry for it!rstevenson wrote:Polarization of light is a well understood phenomenon, and concise clear descriptions of it are easy to find on the web. Here and here, fo example.astrolabe wrote:... However, when viewing objects such as hot top streets or brick sidewalks or even sand facing the sun works best. Does this particular effect tell me that partially absorbed/reflected light gets turned 90 degrees after striking the objects? Or is it the high-energy blue spectrum only that is being polarized especially where the sky is concerned because of scattering? Now throw in the slit experiment and one can see that I have a lot to think about. ...
Rob
As a moderator I thought you would have a better response.harry wrote:
G'day Bystander
...
If you only read 1% of the papers that I go through maybe you may get some idea.
G'day Harry
Perhaps if you only read 1% of the papers that you go through, maybe you might get some idea.
mark swain wrote:What has that got to do with the relationship between, black holes, dark matter, and dark energy? Well They do slate Harry for it!rstevenson wrote:Polarization of light is a well understood phenomenon, and concise clear descriptions of it are easy to find on the web. Here and here, fo example.astrolabe wrote:... However, when viewing objects such as hot top streets or brick sidewalks or even sand facing the sun works best. Does this particular effect tell me that partially absorbed/reflected light gets turned 90 degrees after striking the objects? Or is it the high-energy blue spectrum only that is being polarized especially where the sky is concerned because of scattering? Now throw in the slit experiment and one can see that I have a lot to think about. ...
Rob
As well as the other really great posts, Namely: hstarbuck: alter-ego: astrolabe: Which all was a fantastic read, I Must confess, You all missed A very good point made by Harry. Which is: Where does the energy come from, That turns matter, no bigger or heavier than a Dollar bill, into Energy, That wiped out 100,000 people and flattened a city? Did Not that energy get created When the Atom was created? And when you split that atom, all that energy gets released? What other energy do we not know about, stored in matter?
Mark
There is no energy stored in matter. Matter is energy. If you convert a few grams of matter to its energy form, that amount of energy seems large by human standards (standards developed while huddling around campfires). But the energy isn't large in any absolute sense, compared with typical energies released all over the Universe.mark swain wrote:Where does the energy come from, That turns matter, no bigger or heavier than a Dollar bill, into Energy, That wiped out 100,000 people and flattened a city? Did Not that energy get created When the Atom was created? And when you split that atom, all that energy gets released? What other energy do we not know about, stored in matter?
Chris Peterson wrote:There is no energy stored in matter. Matter is energy. If you convert a few grams of matter to its energy form, that amount of energy seems large by human standards (standards developed while huddling around campfires). But the energy isn't large in any absolute sense, compared with typical energies released all over the Universe.mark swain wrote:Where does the energy come from, That turns matter, no bigger or heavier than a Dollar bill, into Energy, That wiped out 100,000 people and flattened a city? Did Not that energy get created When the Atom was created? And when you split that atom, all that energy gets released? What other energy do we not know about, stored in matter?
That is what I want to try and understand. Electromagnetic force, Is how it should work, In Gravity. But How?astrolabe wrote:You are correct, this thread did devolve somewhat. However, the subject of Gravity can by it's own nature be murky. Gravity is difficult to resolve with the the other basic forces in the Universe and so my "thoughts" were trying to do just that-explain Gravity as perhaps the result of the split in an electromagnetic force once the energy level abated or cooled enough to coalesce into a matter state with the electric part binding matter and the magnet part not included in the created matter but still a part of the matter's environment- perhaps like Gravity?
The other element of the thread about the double slit experiment I felt was relative because of light being also electromagnetic and seemingly also possessing a dual nature. That being evident as the invisible nature of photons disappears when it strikes an object and reveals itself as light, heat or both. And the fact that it is affected by strong gravitational fields resulting in lensing and that it gives off light when it loses an electron.
Perhaps it will help to consider that photons are not massless. They are described as having a rest mass of zero. This is a mathematically useful concept applied to particles that travel at velocity c. But such particles are never at rest. A photon has energy, and therefore has an equivalent mass (and momentum). You can use this mass value even with classical mechanics to come close to describing the behavior of a photon in a gravity field.hstarbuck wrote:What has always been amazing to me is that massless photons are affected by large masses (or something else producing effects we call gravity).
Yes. A black hole would bend the path a little, changing the curvature of the incoming wavefront. Interference occurs with a two slit aperture regardless of whether the input source has a flat or a curved wavefront.How about if in the "early divider double-slit" there was a black hole on one side of the divider with just the right mass and position to bend the photons outwards a bit on the way to the slits (or no divider). Would the diffraction interference pattern appear now?
One additional point: Space curvature is also affected by photons. Within GR framework, Energy is all that's required to affect space in which it exists; mass is one form, photons another. Clearly, mass is the primary, and intuitive, player we think about most.hstarbuck wrote:... What has always been amazing to me is that massless photons are affected by large masses (or something else producing effects we call gravity).
Interesting. Would be mind blowing to get your head around them numbers. The snag is, nothing can leave a black hole to prove it. The universe is a scary place, the full answer to what the universe really is, will probably be the scariest thing of all.Martian16 wrote:Dark energy = dark matter squared, is that what you are proposing? What many are assuming to be DE and DM may just be the force created by whatever is holding our entire universe together. If you can compare our universe to a Black Hole, which exerts a certain force due to gravity, as visible energy and visible matter are brought in. The matter and energy that come into the hole are not what causes the force exertion, (although they can contribute). The collapse of the star is what does the trick. Once the Black Hole is set, anything else going in is automatically forced into its singularity-verse, and supposedly cannot escape. If you could take a reading from the perspective of the Matter, once it's inside, you would most likely realize that what matter and energy there is inside cannot have caused such a force to exist whereby everything is held in place so well.
No Probs Bystander, I did Have a look as well, I thought you would of posted that too. It is interesting, Goes somewhat to saying Dark Matter influences most things we think we understand. And I Thought relevant to this thread. Next Question: What process could possibly make Dark Matter? Oops Sorry That,s another Thread.bystander wrote:Thanks, Mark. I actually meant to post this Friday and it somehow got lost in the shuffle. When I saw your post I went looking for where I posted it, not to be found of course. I thought it was an interesting article. Here is the referenced paper:
Asymmetric Dark Matter and the Sun
- Physical Review Letters 105 011301 (02 July 2010) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.011301
It is an interesting idea. Unfortunately, I don't have online access to the paper, so a lot of details are missing. In particular, it isn't clear by what process the Sun would accumulate dark matter. You would not expect the Sun to encounter galactic dark matter with a relative velocity slower than the solar escape velocity. So most material should just pass through the Sun without being captured. Maybe I'm missing something with respect to how the dark matter interacts with itself (since dark matter particles are presumed to be their own anti-particles). I need to see the paper, or a bit better analysis of the work.bystander wrote:Thanks, Mark. I actually meant to post this Friday and it somehow got lost in the shuffle. When I saw your post I went looking for where I posted it, not to be found of course. I thought it was an interesting article. Here is the referenced paper:
Asymmetric Dark Matter and the Sun
- Physical Review Letters 105 011301 (02 July 2010) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.011301
As, I would assume, Dark Matter interacts by way of gravitationally only, Would not Dark Matter be orbiting the milky way just as the solar system is?Chris Peterson wrote:In particular, it isn't clear by what process the Sun would accumulate dark matter. You would not expect the Sun to encounter galactic dark matter with a relative velocity slower than the solar escape velocity. So most material should just pass through the Sun without being captured. Maybe I'm missing something with respect to how the dark matter interacts with itself
Sort of, but not in a disc. The disc shape of ordinary matter depends on electromagnetic interaction for momentum transfer. The dark matter that orbits the galaxy is in a halo- a somewhat spherical cloud completely surrounding the galaxy. You would only expect the tiniest fraction to be moving with a slow enough relative velocity to be gravitationally captured by the Sun. Maybe that tiny fraction is all that is needed, but I'd like to see how this issue was treated in the paper.swainy wrote:As, I would assume, Dark Matter interacts by way of gravitationally only, Would not Dark Matter be orbiting the milky way just as the solar system is?