On Mar 29, 5:42 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
It is safe to say "Where there is a graviton there is also gravity." I
like the paper(posted it many times) that Scherk,and Schwartz came up
with.in 1972 That in quantum gravity the aggravation is massless and
has spin 2 That is by the way twice as fast as photon's spin. My spin
is in theory tells that spin 2 makes the graviton very heavy(high
inertia),and that can explain a lot of the mysteries of the graviton
Bert
More graviton what-if food for thought.
Atom spin or atomic spin = quantum spintronics, or perhaps simply
quantum string spin, whereas a given elliptical exit electron velocity
is always 'c' unless an external damping force or sluggish quantum
medium is applied.
Without dire consequences, a rogue electron can not speed up or slow
down. Therefore the normal electron velocity of the outer most
elliptical atomic orbit or final exit shell is going to be 'c', or
nearly 3e8 m/sec, instead of the inner most orbital 2.42e6 m/sec
velocity.
The same goes for that atomic escape velocity of the rogue photon, and
perhaps otherwise at twice 'c' representing the graviton exit
velocity.
-
Here's even more brain food for this gravity topic of fast moving
gravitons.
Graviton = Gravity / by G=EMC^2 Glazier
http://pages.prodigy.net/jhonig/bignum/qaearth.html
Atoms in all the earth5 = (a) x (d) x (e)6 = (1.3 x 1025) x (11.34) x
(6.02 x 1023) = 88.745 x 1025 x 1023 = 88.745 x 1048 = 8.87 x 1049
The Earth and moon combined volumes are roughly 1.11e21 m3
The combined mass is roughly 6.0475e24 kg
Based upon the same Avogadro number of 6.02e23 atoms per mol
The combined number of atoms is supposedly in the realm of 9e49
If there were but one graviton per atom, and if 100% of those
gravitons were entirely focused down to merging through one m3 volume
of the moon's L1 would suggest a volumetric graviton population per m3/
sec of merely 9e49.
However, like photons per given atom are many, as well as going off in
all possible directions at the same time, in of itself represents that
our initial conservative graviton swag of 9e49/m3 is absolute
nonsense, and otherwise off by a great many magnitudes of order.
Since mass is a given constant and thus each and every associated atom
is forever constant as long as said mass exist, and since gravitons
are not likely limited as to offering one such measly graviton per
atom, nor as limited to offering one given direction of graviton flux,
is in of itself suggesting that each and every atom offers a nearly
infinite number of said gravitons per any given second.
So, what's the true or best swag worth of gravitons/m3/sec existing
between Earth and our unusually massive and physically dark moon, if
such were quantified as coexisting per second within one given m3 of
the moon's L1 ?
.. - Brad Guth