| | #111 (permalink) | ||
| Resident Bright | Re: Physical Mechanism of Gravity - the Spatiotemporal Ground-State Quote:
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__________________ Coldcreation | ||
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| | #112 (permalink) | |||
| Resident Bright | Re: Physical Mechanism of Gravity - the Spatiotemporal Ground-State Quote:
H (see above and link below) is the location (very close to L1) where the fields (of M1 and M2) cancel precisely, regardless of centripetal force. Recall; when we examining this point where the effective potential drops to zero, we find a smooth surface, not a sharp peak. This means that from H to the surface of M1 or M2 there is a gradual transition in the gradient that tends from a local minimum value of zero to whatever it might be on the surface of a celestial object. The fact emerges: the gravitational field curvature gradient is different along the M1-L1-M2 line than the potential at, say, an angle 90 degrees. It follows that the field surrounding M1 (and M2) is not spherically symmetrical. Unless the primary and secondary bodies (M1 and M2) have similar masses. There is a point H between L1 and the less massive body at which there is no net gravitational force from the fields of M1 and/or M2, i.e., the spacetime curvature gradient is flat (yet it may or may not be the minimum value of potential of the system). See this general explanation, as well as the larger of the two illustration pictured here. All Lagrangian points, with the exception of L1, exist only in rotating systems. An outward fictitious centrifugal force is balanced, at these points, by the 'attractive' gravitational forces of M1 and M2. In a non-rotating static or inertial system Lagrange point L1 (and/or H) would still exist. Rotation slightly pushes L1 away from the more massive body towards the less massive object. Moving away from the L1 (or H) saddle point the potential is curving 'up' in two directions and 'down' in two directions (along the M1-L1-M2 line). The Lagrange points, generally, are critical points of the potential where the force is zero, i.e., the potential gradient of the gravitational field plus the fictitious centrifugal force are in balance. H (or L1) is different, since the centrifugal force becomes irrelevant. Spacetime is flat at H. Quote:
In the quote above I was referring to the way the earth (for example) remains in orbit around the sun at precisely the right distance according to its mass and velocity, where if velocity were greater the centrifugal force would over power gravity resulting in the dispersal of the system, or the contrary (slower orbital motion and weaker centrifugal force leading to collapse or collision with the sun). The fact that there is an exact cancelation of the two forces leads me to believe that a fine-tuning problem inherent in celestial mechanics. I don't buy (or I won't pay full price for) the natural selection hypothesis during some initial condition process. The solar system appears to well organized for that, not to mention other gravitating systems. At the same time, I realize that the general relativistic approach to the relationship between inertia and gravitational force reduces the physical phenomenon to the same constant, i.e. equality of inertial and gravitational force. Centrifugal forces act (in a way) exactly like the force of gravity, proportional to the masses of the bodies. But there seems to be a need for something more (or something less, I should say). I argue that there is a mechanism in space responsible for generating equilibrium, independent of centrifugal force; that there is no need for a finely tuned counter-force (especially not a fictitious centrifugal force) to justify gravitational stability of the kind where attraction and repulsion are in perpetual competition, and where one wins sporadic exchanges. For sure, the centrifugal force interpretation, generally accepted today, does away with any supernatural intervention (of the Newtonian kind), but it is left with a severe fine tuning problem. The fine-tuning of both large and small-scale gravitating systems results from a harmonious interaction between the intrinsic gravitational fields surrounding massive bodies in relation to neutral points present in the physical environment where objects are situated: these positions possess properties consistent with the spacetime substratum itself, the spatiotemporal ground-state, the field-free vacuum, empty space, zero local potential, and yes, even the cosmological constant (lambda), and serve to mediate stability. So instead of a competition between an attractive gravitational force and a countering outward centrifugal force, we have curved spacetime in competition with spacetime that is not curved. To be continued... CC
__________________ Coldcreation Last edited by coldcreation; 06-27-2008 at 04:35 PM. Reason: typo | |||
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| | #113 (permalink) | |
| Creating Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: U.S. Midwest
Posts: 2,043
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Physical Mechanism of Gravity - the Spatiotemporal Ground-State Quote:
I'm sure there are NASA and soviet missions that can be referenced here. I know the "solar probe" is going to Jupiter to shed momentum - that being the easiest way to use a gravity assist to accomplish a close orbit to the sun. To use rocket fuel alone to shed that much angular momentum in order to achieve a close orbit to the sun would require way to much fuel... I'll look for some references. My only other question is: if the equations we use now describe orbital dynamics so well, why are we looking for a solution that guarantees stability? Doesn't the current method predict the correct amount of stability? I believe it does. ~modest
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| | #114 (permalink) | ||||
| Resident Bright | Re: Physical Mechanism of Gravity - the Spatiotemporal Ground-State Quote:
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At the other end of the scale, as it were, there is a need to introduce supermassive black holes. Quote:
Instead of 'that which fills space' being the culprit, the properties of 'that which is space' should be identified. CC
__________________ Coldcreation | ||||
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| | #115 (permalink) | |||
| Creating Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: U.S. Midwest
Posts: 2,043
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Changing orbital speed and velocity - how stable is an orbit Quote:
But, I think you may have missed my point here: Quote:
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L = mvr where m is mass, v is speed, and r is radius. By this we can calculate earth's current angular momentum to be: 2.663 x 10^40 kg m^2 s^-1. To reach Mercury's orbit, earth would need: 1.656 x 10^40 kg m^2 s^-1 So, we would have to shed 38 percent of our momentum to reach Mercury's orbit. That's not easy - that's not a balancing act. I'm trying to say, loosing energy would get us closer to the sun and gaining energy would take our orbit further out - but not in a "fall into the sun" and "fling out of the solar system" kind of way. The orbit would adjust is all. It's the same way with the sun loosing mass which it has done since the solar system began. Earth's orbit surely grew a bit as a result - but we didn't go flying out of the system. Newton's laws don't necessitate that as you may be thinking they do. ~modest EDIT: I admit, this is a different than I was thinking back in the "dynamic equilibrium" thread. I was not thinking it would be this hard to deestablish an orbit. But, it appears from the calculations and everything I'm reading - Maybe it is. Then again, I'm not real good with orbits - we may need to find some sources to establish this. Or, perhaps a third opinion...
__________________ Last edited by modest; 06-28-2008 at 02:33 AM. Reason: shown | |||
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| | #116 (permalink) |
| Resident Bright | Re: Physical Mechanism of Gravity - the Spatiotemporal Ground-State Off topic: For my 1000th post here at Hypography I would have liked to write something special, but I'm not into numerology (1000 is no more special than 999 or 1001), so I won't. I would just like to take this opportunity, anyway, to thank Tormod and the whole crew (not to forget all the others who contribute) for having made such a virtual space of rich, creative and open discussion possible. Chapeau. ![]() CC
__________________ Coldcreation |
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| | #117 (permalink) | |
| Hypo Contributer Join Date: May 2007 Location: Dark Side of the Moon
Posts: 1,061
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Quote:
now back to the point: on with the thread!
__________________ There are many things to be shared with the Four Colors of humanity in our common destiny as one with our Mother the Earth. It is this sharing that must be considered with great care by the Elders and the medicine people who carry the Sacred Trusts, so that no harm may come to people through ignorance and misuse of these powerful forces. Resolution of the Fifth Annual Meetings of the Traditional Elders Circle, 1980 | |
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| | #118 (permalink) | |||
| Resident Bright | Re: Physical Mechanism of Gravity - the Spatiotemporal Ground-State Quote:
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The goal here is not to discredit standard orbital mechanics, simply, to point out where revision could and should be made (notably with respect to rotational curves), and to shed light on the mechanism of gravity. If both goals are related, and I will attempt to point out that they are, then something more, or something less, will have to be added or subtracted from orbital mechanics (respectively). That will be the subject of the following posts. CC
__________________ Coldcreation | |||
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| | #119 (permalink) | ||
| Resident Bright | Re: Physical Mechanism of Gravity - the Spatiotemporal Ground-State Gentlemen, I just sent in my absentee ballot, so it is time to return to serious business: the problem of gravity. We were discussing the rotational curves of galaxies and how these deviations (or anomalies, which have become the norm) might be explain without the injunction of nonbaryonic dark matter or MOND. First, let's take a look at the problem, in brief. The stars in most galaxies appear to be orbiting the galactic core faster than they should be according to both Newtonian mechanics and GR. ![]() Plot showing the relationship between orbital speed and distance from the galactic core for stars and gas of a spiral galaxy.*Source ![]() Spiral galaxy NGC 4736 (enhanced beyond its original splendor with artificial colors by Coldcreation) does not need dark matter to explain the rotational curves of stars and gas, since the rotational curve appears not to be flat (as the diagram above): This is a problem for galaxy formation models, where dark matter is thought to be important. Source Quote:
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Discussion to follow... CC
__________________ Coldcreation Last edited by coldcreation; 10-13-2008 at 02:11 AM. Reason: typos | ||
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| | #120 (permalink) | |
| Understanding Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 373
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Physical Mechanism of Gravity - the Spatiotemporal Ground-State G'day from the land of ozzzzzzzzz Coldcreation said Quote:
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