| | #51 (permalink) | |
| Thinking | Re: Belated Time travel .. ? I'm not an expert either Modest. However orbiting satellites are only in apparent freefall. They are not free of gravity but thay are experiencing 'less' of it because of their distance compared to the surface of the earth. This is the cause for the correction. Less gravity, less g-force. I don't really understand black holes, but the fact that our bodies (and everything else) are stretched as we cross the event threshold implies that gravity is measurably different between our ankles and our ears once we descend into it. This would cause an exponential squeezing effect. Still trying to understand all of your post. cool bananas ... Drum | |
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| | #52 (permalink) | |
| Creating | Re: Gravitational vs. velocity time dilation I apologize if my example was confusing or unhelpful Drum. By using the example of a black hole I was trying to eliminate the property of g-force and in doing so demonstrate a point. That probably just overcomplicated things needlessly. I will stipulate that gravitational time dilation can be mathematically equivalent to special relativity’s time dilation of relative velocities via the equivalence principle so long as the actual physical nature of the differences are understood. As long as we stay away from words like g-force and free-fall and the funny definitions they’ve taken on, I think we can stop in agreement here. Since this is all tangent to your original post I think that may be best. If you are looking for insightful differences and similarities between the two, there are people here well-enough versed in SR and GR to explain it - but I’m afraid it’s not me ![]() - modest ---------------- | |
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| | #53 (permalink) | ||
| Understanding | Re: Belated Time travel .. ? Quote:
No as you cross the event horizon you wouldnt feel anything much especially if the black hole was especially large as Modest has already explained...... Only when you approached the singularity would you feel the gravitational tidal forces that would rip you apart. This may take a very long time depending on how big the black hole is. Peace ![]() | ||
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| | #54 (permalink) | |||
| Thinking | Re: Belated Time travel .. ? Hey Modest ... I re-read Craigs post and I am in agreement with you. Quote:
Quote:
Snoop ... If the gravitational tidal forces rip you apart deep inside the hole, would they still reach to the Event Horizon, no matter how feeble. Logic would dictate that they must, as they (gravity) are the cause of the Event Horizon Boundary ??? cool bananas ... Drum | |||
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| | #55 (permalink) | ||
| Creating | Quote:
Here are a few numbers I calculated to get an intuitive sense of this. Body describes a typical object of mass M, “M SM” means “million solar masses”, R is the radius of its event horizon, F the tidal force (tension) experienced by a 1 meter cable connecting a pair of 50 kg bodies (my idealization of a human body), and D the average density within a sphere of radius R. Code: Body M (kg) R (m) F (N) D (kg/m^3)
Planet 1e25 1.48e-2 1.52e20 7.33e29
Star 1e31 1.48e4 2.05e10 7.33e17
Globular Cluster (5M SM) 1e37 1.48e10 2.05e-2 7.33e5
40 M SM 8e37 1.19e11 3.20e-4 1.15e4
50 M SM 1e38 1.48e11 2.05e-4 7.33e3
130M SM 2.6e38 3.85e11 3.03e-5 1.08e3
8e39 1.19e13 3.20e-8 1.15e0
Galaxy 1e42 1.48e15 2.05e-12 7.33e-5
Universe 1e53 1.48e26 ~1e-34 7.33e-27
) kg, average density is about the same as sea level Earth atmosphere. For a galaxy-mass black hole, the density can approach a “soft” vacuum, while for a universe-mass one, the density is about 4 hydrogen atoms / m^3 – a very “hard” vacuum.I can’t imagine any natural process that would allow such a black hole to form, but if one could somehow entice about 50 million solar masses into a sphere about the radius of the Earth’s orbit without them coalescing into something super-dense or singularity-ish, you’d have a black hole with no terrible tidal forces anywhere, and an average density less than that of water. At its center, like the center of a star or planet, gravitational force would be zero, and clocks would tick at the same rate as very distant ones. ---------------- Moderator: Computers and Technology; Medical Science; Science Projects and Homework; Philosophy of Science; Physics and Mathematics; Environmental Studies ![]() | ||
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| | #56 (permalink) | ||
| Creating | Re: Some startling (to me) black hole calculation results Quote:
I do understand the point of the post describing less tidal stress for larger black holes and agree completely. - modest ---------------- | ||
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| | #57 (permalink) | ||
| Married man ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Some startling (to me) black hole calculation results Like Modest, I found your analysis very enlightening, Craig. I had never considered density within a black hole before. One thing that confuses me is your last statement: Quote:
If the gravitational force is zero at the center, then how can there be a singularity at all? Why would this not cause a clock to run at a different speed than say a clock at 1/4r? ---------------- Hypography Science Forums Moderator --- "There are no passengers on Spaceship Earth. We are all crew." - Marshall McLuhan "We must not forget that when radium was discovered no one knew that it would prove useful in hospitals. The work was one of pure science. And this is a proof that scientific work must not be considered from the point of view of the direct usefulness of it." - Marie Curie | ||
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| | #58 (permalink) | ||
| Creating | Re: Belated Time travel .. ? Quote:
in excel and got some some results: all are relative to a stationary observer on earth and all orbits were considered circular International Space Station: Altitude: 340 Km Velocity Time Dilation: -25.19 µS/Day (microseconds (millionths) per day) Gravitational Time Dilation: +3.05 µS/Day Total Time Dilation: -22.13 µS/Day GPS satellites: Altitude: 20200 Km Velocity Time Dilation: -5.55 µS/Day Gravitational Time Dilation: +45.77 µS/Day Total Time Dilation: 40.22 µS/Day Geosynchronous satellites: Altitude: 36000 Km Velocity Time Dilation: null Gravitational Time Dilation: +51.14 µS/Day Total Time Dilation: +51.14 µS/Day Moon's orbital distance: Altitude: 378640 Km Velocity Time Dilation: -0.139 µS/Day Gravitational Time Dilation: +59.19 µS/Day Total Time Dilation: +59.05 µS/Day A couple interesting things - the velocity time dilation is zero with something orbiting at 36,000 Km because it has no relative motion. Geosynchronous satellites are only gravitationally time dilated from our perspective. Also, gravitational and velocity dilation are an equal +/- 18.17 µS/Day at 2750 Km. Meaning there is no net time dilation of a satellite at that altitude. - modest ---------------- Last edited by modest; 01-12-2008 at 03:14 PM. Reason: typos | ||
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| | #60 (permalink) | ||||
| Creating | Cool data! I duplicated modest's input with this little MUMPS program: Code: s c=299792458,u=398600441800000,r0=6378100 s V=r0*2*/86400,T0V=V/c**2*-1+1**.5,T0G=-2*u/r0/c/c+1**.5 f r A q:A="" s R=(A," ")*1000+r0,V=u/R**.5,T1V=V/c**2*-1+1**.5,T1G=-2*u/R/c/c+1**.5 w (R,10)," ",(V,9,2)," ",(T1V/T0V*86400-86400,0,14)," ",(T1G/T0G*86400-86400,0,14)," ",(T1V/T0V*T1G/T0G*86400-86400,0,14),! Code: Height Radius Speed VT dilation GT dilation Net dilation
(km) (m) (m/s) (s/day) (s/day) (s/day)
340 6718100 7702.75 -0.00002841554917 0.00000304054361 -0.00002537500556
9550711.05 6460.28 -0.00001995721399 0.00001995721399 0
20200 26578100 3872.64 -0.00000710527853 0.00004566108491 0.00003855580638
36000 42378100 3066.89 -0.00000441763425 0.00005103637356 0.00004661873931
378640 385018100 1017.49 -0.00000039421261 0.00005908321682 0.00005868900420
Quote:
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Both my net time dilation of 0.00003855580638 s/day and modest’s of 0.00004022 s/day disagree slightly with the “about 38 microseconds per day” (0.000038 s/day) given by the Wikipedia article “GPS”. I suspect they’re using the sidereal time, where the day is just a bit longer than 86164 s, in which case my result, rounded to the nearest microsecond (µs) matches wikipedia’s. ---------------- Moderator: Computers and Technology; Medical Science; Science Projects and Homework; Philosophy of Science; Physics and Mathematics; Environmental Studies ![]() Last edited by CraigD; 01-14-2008 at 04:26 PM. | ||||
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