![]() |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
George Dishman replied to Jeff Root on November 27 in the
thread "Red shift and homogeneity": | how about having Rocky and Bullwinkle | orbiting around each other in space held only by their | mutual gravitational attraction? Would the total mass | of the system be greater or less than than the sum of | their individual masses? I think you need to consider | both kinetic energy and gravitational potential energy. George Dishman replied to Jeff Root on December 10 in the thread "Red shift and homogeneity": Suppose they are held by a massless rope. In that case, the mass of the system is greatest when they are close together, orbiting rapidly. Right. For the gravitational case, they remain in orbit only as long as the sum of the gravitational potential energy and their kinetic energy is less than zero. The gravity rope can stretch infinitely, but it has limited strength. If the kinetic energy is too great for the amount the rope is stretched, the rope breaks and Rocky is flung away. Remember the discussion on 'escape velocity'? Actually I don't recall one which particularly applies here. Was it with "JosX", or more recent? It was the one where you (or maybe someone else) said they couldn't see why 'escape velocity' depended only on the speed and not on the direction. The standard argument is that the graviational potential energy is negative. While the sum of potential and kinetic is less than zero, the particle cannot escape. Oh of course! Now this is weird. A thread on escape velocity started a few days ago in sci.physics, and "Uncle Al" made some comments which included the clear implication that it depends on the direction of launch. He said: | Escape velocity is the minimum initial impulse velocity at and | normal to the surface (no planetary atmosphere, no rotation) | necessary to launch a test mass to infinity This greatly surprised me, and I went looking for the thread you refer to just a couple of hours before I read your message! That thread was titled "Esape velocity question" (sic) and took place last March. I negligently left off on that thread because the last posts to me contained too much information for me to be able to deal with properly. They appear to answer my question/objection, but I was still uncertain. I have yet to re-read those posts in detail, but you said something about centrifugal force on a projectile launched at an angle. Combining that with something Bill Owen said, I surmise that the answer is that the horizontal velocity is turned into vertical velocity. Nobody actually said that to me, though, and if it is a correct description of what happens, I'd think you would have, so I'm not sure. The onus is on me to re-read those posts, and ask further questions and thank you and Bill for your answers. There was one statement I made that you and Bill agreed was wrong that I'm sure was right, so I really should go back to it. In any case, the idea that the horizontal velocity eventually becomes vertical velocity seems to make sense and answers my objection, and John Zinni corrected "Uncle Al", | It does not need to be normal to the surface. Any old | direction will do, it will just take a slightly less direct | route to infinity. and "Uncle Al" immediately agreed. So, how does that relate to the discussion we were in here? So does gravitational potential energy contribute to the mass of the system? If so the mass should be _less_ than the sum of R&B if they are in orbit, equal to the sum if they are passing by on parabolic paths and greater for hyperbolic trajectories. If it doesn't, the total will always be greater than the sum of their individual masses. Since it seems absurd that the total mass could be less than the sum of the individual masses, you must be trying to get me to see that potential energy does *not* contribute to the mass of the system. Is that right? I hope it *is* right that potential energy doesn't contribute to the mass, because it feels right, and the contrary feels wrong. I haven't tried to think through what the consequences are, though. Time for a silly diagram to see what a consequence might be. Assume this is in space so there are no other influences: Box 3 +--------------------------+ | | | Box 1 | | +---+------+ | | | o | | | | |\ | Box 2 | | | | \ | +-------+ | | | M \ | | | | | | G=========R | | | | M / | | | | | | | / | +-------+ | | | |/ | | | | o | | | +---+------+ | | | +--------------------------+ Two large masses "M" are held apart by ropes over pulleys "o" fixed to the sides of box 1. They are allowed to move together under their gravitational attraction and the ropes turn generator "G". The power from the generator is fed by the pair of wires "==" to resistor "R". The energy fed to R increases its temperature and its mass through E=mc^2. Box 3 is a closed system so the total mass must remain constant. The conclusion is that the mass of Box 1 must decrease as the masses get closer together. It may be a counter-intuitive result but I think it follows logically. An absolutely clear illustration. Obviously logic must be thrown out and discarded as misleading. No more logic. Okay, the two masses have a greater total mass when they are separated than when they are close together. The diagram clearly shows that. It is ridiculous. Absurd. Impossible. Have I missed something? All I can think to point out is that the two masses, being pulled together by their mutual gravitational force, apply force to the ropes and thus to the ends of the box, thus compressing its sides. When the masses are falling toward each other, the gravitational force is increasing, and some of the force is applied to the rotors of the generators, (two so that the box doesn't rotate) and from the rotors to the stators, thus generating electric current. When the two masses are together, the gravitational force between them is at maximum, and is applied entirely at the point of contact between them. I don't see that any of those facts help me. If the two masses were in orbit around each other at the starting distance, rather than being held apart by forces in the ropes and the box, they would have some additional mass due to their kinetic energy. If the two masses were in orbit around each other at their final positions, they would have a *greater* additional mass because their kinetic energy would be greater. If the forces in the ropes and the box somehow represent an amount of mass equal to the mass represented by the kinetic energy, then I would expect the forces at the point of contact of the two masses in their final positions to represent a greater mass, not less. Am I sufficiently confused yet? -- Jeff, in Minneapolis .. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jeff Root" wrote in message om... [much snipped] In any case, the idea that the horizontal velocity eventually becomes vertical velocity seems to make sense and answers my objection, and John Zinni corrected "Uncle Al", Consider a projectile on a hyperbolic orbit. As it approaches infinity the angle between its path and the gravitational force approaches zero so it becomes a radial motion with the force merely slowing it. | It does not need to be normal to the surface. Any old | direction will do, it will just take a slightly less direct | route to infinity. and "Uncle Al" immediately agreed. It is well known but the lingering doubt I think people have is that some kinetic energy surely remains in the transverse component because even though the angle is tending to zero, it is only because the range is tending to infinity. There is always an angular velocity but it is angular momentum that is conserved so perhaps you could use that to see what happens to the energy in the angular component of the motion. If it goes to zero you could have your proof. So, how does that relate to the discussion we were in here? So does gravitational potential energy contribute to the mass of the system? If so the mass should be _less_ than the sum of R&B if they are in orbit, equal to the sum if they are passing by on parabolic paths and greater for hyperbolic trajectories. If it doesn't, the total will always be greater than the sum of their individual masses. Since it seems absurd that the total mass could be less than the sum of the individual masses, you must be trying to get me to see that potential energy does *not* contribute to the mass of the system. Is that right? I hope it *is* right that potential energy doesn't contribute to the mass, because it feels right, and the contrary feels wrong. I haven't tried to think through what the consequences are, though. Time for a silly diagram to see what a consequence might be. Assume this is in space so there are no other influences: Box 3 +--------------------------+ | | | Box 1 | | +---+------+ | | | o | | | | |\ | Box 2 | | | | \ | +-------+ | | | M \ | | | | | | G=========R | | | | M / | | | | | | | / | +-------+ | | | |/ | | | | o | | | +---+------+ | | | +--------------------------+ Two large masses "M" are held apart by ropes over pulleys "o" fixed to the sides of box 1. They are allowed to move together under their gravitational attraction and the ropes turn generator "G". The power from the generator is fed by the pair of wires "==" to resistor "R". The energy fed to R increases its temperature and its mass through E=mc^2. Box 3 is a closed system so the total mass must remain constant. The conclusion is that the mass of Box 1 must decrease as the masses get closer together. It may be a counter-intuitive result but I think it follows logically. An absolutely clear illustration. Thank you :-) Obviously logic must be thrown out and discarded as misleading. No more logic. :-o Okay, the two masses have a greater total mass when they are separated than when they are close together. The diagram clearly shows that. It is ridiculous. Absurd. Impossible. That's the fascinating thing about science, sometimes it produces a result we feel just has to be wrong, but if it follows from observation we have to accept it. Have I missed something? Not that I am aware of. All I can think to point out is that the two masses, being pulled together by their mutual gravitational force, apply force to the ropes and thus to the ends of the box, thus compressing its sides. When the masses are falling toward each other, the gravitational force is increasing, and some of the force is applied to the rotors of the generators, (two so that the box doesn't rotate) and from the rotors to the stators, thus generating electric current. When the two masses are together, the gravitational force between them is at maximum, and is applied entirely at the point of contact between them. I don't see that any of those facts help me. They don't. The mass of box 2 increases regardless so whatever distortions you consider for box 1, they only redistribute the energy between different forms within the box. The mass of box 1 must reduce regardless. If the two masses were in orbit around each other at the starting distance, rather than being held apart by forces in the ropes and the box, they would have some additional mass due to their kinetic energy. Yep. If the two masses were in orbit around each other at their final positions, they would have a *greater* additional mass because their kinetic energy would be greater. Yep, but wouldn't their potential energy have fallen by more than the increase in the kinetic increased? That was the original point. If the forces in the ropes and the box somehow represent an amount of mass equal to the mass represented by the kinetic energy, then I would expect the forces at the point of contact of the two masses in their final positions to represent a greater mass, not less. Am I sufficiently confused yet? No, not confused, you just find it hard to accept the answer. Of course I might be wrong but I don't see where there is much scope to conserve the total energy without having the mass of box 1 decrease. It might be appropriate to crosspost this to sci.physics as more on-topic but perhaps with some trimming first so I'll leave it just here. George |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"George Dishman" wrote in message ...
That's the fascinating thing about science, sometimes it produces a result we feel just has to be wrong, but if it follows from observation we have to accept it. Funny,funny,funny. It may be fascinating because of the utter stupidity of determining that if the motion of the local stars takes 23 hours 56 min 04 sec then this must be the rotation of the Earth through 360 deg . You may be the most backward people to set foot on the planet,truly !. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
(George G. Dishman) wrote in message om...
I have crossposted this to sci.physics as well as sci.astro. (Jim Greenfield) wrote in message . com... (Jeff Root) wrote in message . com... George Dishman replied to Jeff Root on November 27 in the thread "Red shift and homogeneity": | how about having Rocky and Bullwinkle | orbiting around each other in space held only by their | mutual gravitational attraction? Would the total mass | of the system be greater or less than than the sum of | their individual masses? I think you need to consider | both kinetic energy and gravitational potential energy. It would have greater mass because you have stored energy in it by compressing the spring. That energy can be recovered by letting the spring expand against a force but it is not gravitational potential energy when in the spring. ... I have posted on thread 'Mass of a coiled Spring' question as to does gravitational potential energy contribute to the mass. Unc had previously claimed that a coiled spring could be shown by calorific experiment to contain more mass than an unstressed one. I then suggested that a piece of rock subject to this type of experiment in a valley should give a different result from an identical piece at the mountain top-- silence........ Erm, well, yes, I can undertsand that. How do you propose to store the energy? Is it a springy piece of rock? Why would it matter where you do the experiment? The rock is held up by the mountain. I just wonder does the higher rock have more mass due to its altitude (and increased gravitational potential energy) Then sugestion (from others) that potential gravitational energy does not contribute mass, That is certainly germaine to this discussion. It does not affect the mass of the individuals but I believe it affects the mass of the system as you say later. and I await comment on what then if gravity is used to compress the spring! The method you use to compress the spring doesn't matter, it is the fact that energy is stored in the EM bonds between the atoms and m=e/c^2 that changes the mass of the spring. As for Rocky and Bullwinkle: maybe you are mistakingly considering them as individuals, when they are always just one system, with the center of the system not doing anything (as the center of gravity between) Yes, that is the key, but perhaps you missed the earlier posts. The question is how does the mass of the system compare to the sum of the masses of the individuals in two different scenarios: 1) R&B are relatively far apart so gravitational effects are negligible. They are rotating about a common point at high speed tethered by a (massless) rope. Jeff and I agree the mass of the system must be _greater_ than the sum of the masses of R&B because the kinetic energy of their motion must be included. The "massless" rope is tensioned, as is a compressed spring. Otherwise R&B would fly apart. 2) R&B are relatively close together and are orbiting about a common point held only by mutual gravitational attraction (there is no rope). I think the mass of the system must be _less_ than the sum of the masses of R&B because the fact that they are in a stable orbit means the sum of the kinetic energy and the gravitational potential energy must be negative. If gravitational potential energy does not contribute to the mass of the system then the total in (2) would be greater as in (1). My diagram above attempts to make the case that it does contribute based on conservation of total energy in a closed system, box 3. Note that in none of this has anyone suggested that the mass of either Rocky or Bullwinkle would be affected, only that of the system. I have thought for some time that this effect may be overlooked in binary star systems, when considering the causes of the EMR behaviour I was going to mention that in my last post and snipped it at the last minute. For example in the binary system measured by Hulse and Taylor, energy is being lost in the form of gravitational radiation. That means that in theory the total mass of the system must be falling, but I guess other effects, such as the loss of energy through the light that allows us to see those stars, are much greater so I doubt this effect could be measured. However, it is significant in cosmology since certain models have the (negative) gravitational potential energy exactly equal in magnitude to the (positive) energy in the form of radiation and matter. The zero total means there is no question of where the energy came from to create the universe. George Thanks George Jim G |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jim Greenfield" wrote in message om... (George G. Dishman) wrote in message om... (Jim Greenfield) wrote in message . com... I then suggested that a piece of rock subject to this type of experiment in a valley should give a different result from an identical piece at the mountain top-- silence........ Erm, well, yes, I can undertsand that. How do you propose to store the energy? Is it a springy piece of rock? Why would it matter where you do the experiment? The rock is held up by the mountain. I just wonder does the higher rock have more mass due to its altitude (and increased gravitational potential energy) No, AFAIK the rock has the same mass as if it was lower and so does the planet. The mass of the system is probably the same because raising the rock from the bottom needed energy. Put the other way round, if you throw the rock of the mountain into a pool. there is a loss of potential energy that is converted first into kinetic as the rock gains speed while falling, then into heat as it is slowed in the water. Total energy remains constant so total mass also remains constant. Yes, that is the key, but perhaps you missed the earlier posts. The question is how does the mass of the system compare to the sum of the masses of the individuals in two different scenarios: 1) R&B are relatively far apart so gravitational effects are negligible. They are rotating about a common point at high speed tethered by a (massless) rope. Jeff and I agree the mass of the system must be _greater_ than the sum of the masses of R&B because the kinetic energy of their motion must be included. The "massless" rope is tensioned, as is a compressed spring. Otherwise R&B would fly apart. I was assuming the rope did not stretch. Energy is force times distance (the integral if the force varies) so if the rope doesn't stretch there is no energy stored. Thanks George Pleasure. George |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"George Dishman" wrote in message ...
"Jim Greenfield" wrote in message om... (George G. Dishman) wrote in message om... (Jim Greenfield) wrote in message . com... I then suggested that a piece of rock subject to this type of experiment in a valley should give a different result from an identical piece at the mountain top-- silence........ Erm, well, yes, I can undertsand that. How do you propose to store the energy? Is it a springy piece of rock? Why would it matter where you do the experiment? The rock is held up by the mountain. I just wonder does the higher rock have more mass due to its altitude (and increased gravitational potential energy) No, AFAIK the rock has the same mass as if it was lower and so does the planet. The mass of the system is probably the same because raising the rock from the bottom needed energy. Put the other way round, if you throw the rock of the mountain into a pool. there is a loss of potential energy that is converted first into kinetic as the rock gains speed while falling, then into heat as it is slowed in the water. Total energy remains constant so total mass also remains constant. Compessing the spring required (work) energy input as well. If gravity is used to perform the compression, a larger piece of rock is needed at the top of the mountain than in the valley, as gravity is less at the higher level. But the same amount of energy (mass) is stored in the spring (if the calorific thing is correct). I think this shows that potential (gravitational) energy SHOULD contribute mass to the higher rock, and R&B's individual masses would be greater at distance due to the increased potential (for gravity to accellerate them) Yes, that is the key, but perhaps you missed the earlier posts. The question is how does the mass of the system compare to the sum of the masses of the individuals in two different scenarios: 1) R&B are relatively far apart so gravitational effects are negligible. They are rotating about a common point at high speed tethered by a (massless) rope. Jeff and I agree the mass of the system must be _greater_ than the sum of the masses of R&B because the kinetic energy of their motion must be included. The "massless" rope is tensioned, as is a compressed spring. Otherwise R&B would fly apart. I was assuming the rope did not stretch. Energy is force times distance (the integral if the force varies) so if the rope doesn't stretch there is no energy stored. Don't you mean "work is force times distance"- tension in the rope is equivalent to tension in the spring, is to tension in the mountain supporting the rock ,......and think about bringing opposing magnetic poles close- work is done, but if I lock them in proximity, and then do the "calorific mass equivalence test", will I see an increase in the mass of the magnets?) Jim G |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jim Greenfield" wrote in message om... "George Dishman" wrote in message ... "Jim Greenfield" wrote in message om... (George G. Dishman) wrote in message om... (Jim Greenfield) wrote in message . com... I then suggested that a piece of rock subject to this type of experiment in a valley should give a different result from an identical piece at the mountain top-- silence........ Erm, well, yes, I can undertsand that. How do you propose to store the energy? Is it a springy piece of rock? Why would it matter where you do the experiment? The rock is held up by the mountain. I just wonder does the higher rock have more mass due to its altitude (and increased gravitational potential energy) No, AFAIK the rock has the same mass as if it was lower and so does the planet. The mass of the system is probably the same because raising the rock from the bottom needed energy. Put the other way round, if you throw the rock of the mountain into a pool. there is a loss of potential energy that is converted first into kinetic as the rock gains speed while falling, then into heat as it is slowed in the water. Total energy remains constant so total mass also remains constant. Compessing the spring required (work) energy input as well. That was the point, the spring was compressed but the rock wasn't. You can nitpick that everything is compressible to some degree but I took it that you changed from a spring to a rock to indicate it was non-compressible. If gravity is used to perform the compression, a larger piece of rock is needed at the top of the mountain than in the valley, as gravity is less at the higher level. But the same amount of energy (mass) is stored in the spring (if the calorific thing is correct). The force compressing the spring is due to gravity so the source of the energy is the gravitational field, not the rock. I think this shows that potential (gravitational) energy SHOULD contribute mass to the higher rock, and R&B's individual masses would be greater at distance due to the increased potential (for gravity to accellerate them) The "potential for gravity to accellerate them" also suggests the energy is in the gravitational field, not in the rock. Yes, that is the key, but perhaps you missed the earlier posts. The question is how does the mass of the system compare to the sum of the masses of the individuals in two different scenarios: 1) R&B are relatively far apart so gravitational effects are negligible. They are rotating about a common point at high speed tethered by a (massless) rope. Jeff and I agree the mass of the system must be _greater_ than the sum of the masses of R&B because the kinetic energy of their motion must be included. The "massless" rope is tensioned, as is a compressed spring. Otherwise R&B would fly apart. I was assuming the rope did not stretch. Energy is force times distance (the integral if the force varies) so if the rope doesn't stretch there is no energy stored. Don't you mean "work is force times distance"- 'work done' is another phrase meaning energy. If you press on a spring it gets shorter. The end moves against a force so work is done and energy transferred from whatever creates the force into the spring. When you press on a rock in comparison, there is no significant energy stored. tension in the rope is equivalent to tension in the spring, is to tension in the mountain supporting the rock If the tension is "in the mountain supporting the rock", then it would be the mass of the mountain that would increase, not that of the rock. ,......and think about bringing opposing magnetic poles close- work is done, but if I lock them in proximity, and then do the "calorific mass equivalence test", will I see an increase in the mass of the magnets?) No, the energy is stored in the magnetic field, not in the magnets. I believe the mass of the system would change but not that of the magnets. Incidentally, a small technical note: gravitational effects are a result of what is called the "stress-energy tensor" so in fact pressure creates gravitational effects as well as mass. I don't know GR well enough to comment further but I thought I would mention it in case just to be complete. I don't think it affects our discussion. George |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"George Dishman" wrote in message ...
"Jim Greenfield" wrote in message om... "George Dishman" wrote in message ... "Jim Greenfield" wrote in message om... (George G. Dishman) wrote in message om... (Jim Greenfield) wrote in message . com... The rock is held up by the mountain. I just wonder does the higher rock have more mass due to its altitude (and increased gravitational potential energy) No, AFAIK the rock has the same mass as if it was lower and so does the planet. The mass of the system is probably the same because raising the rock from the bottom needed energy. Put the other way round, if you throw the rock of the mountain into a pool. there is a loss of potential energy that is converted first into kinetic as the rock gains speed while falling, then into heat as it is slowed in the water. Total energy remains constant so total mass also remains constant. Compessing the spring required (work) energy input as well. That was the point, the spring was compressed but the rock wasn't. You can nitpick that everything is compressible to some degree but I took it that you changed from a spring to a rock to indicate it was non-compressible. Compression of the rock is not the issue: it is comparison of the different energies- that stored in the spring due to compression, and that (equal amount) of energy expended by lifting the rock against gravity. If gravity is used to perform the compression, a larger piece of rock is needed at the top of the mountain than in the valley, as gravity is less at the higher level. But the same amount of energy (mass) is stored in the spring (if the calorific thing is correct). The force compressing the spring is due to gravity so the source of the energy is the gravitational field, not the rock. Maybe- but gravity has contributed indirectly mass to the spring (if the calorific experiment re increased mass due to the stress is correct). Gravity has increased the mass of the spring, but did the increase come from the rock or the gravitational field? I think this shows that potential (gravitational) energy SHOULD contribute mass to the higher rock, and R&B's individual masses would be greater at distance due to the increased potential (for gravity to accellerate them) The "potential for gravity to accellerate them" also suggests the energy is in the gravitational field, not in the rock. Yes, that is the key, but perhaps you missed the earlier posts. The question is how does the mass of the system compare to the sum of the masses of the individuals in two different scenarios: 1) R&B are relatively far apart so gravitational effects are negligible. They are rotating about a common point at high speed tethered by a (massless) rope. Jeff and I agree the mass of the system must be _greater_ than the sum of the masses of R&B because the kinetic energy of their motion must be included. The "massless" rope is tensioned, as is a compressed spring. Otherwise R&B would fly apart. I was assuming the rope did not stretch. Energy is force times distance (the integral if the force varies) so if the rope doesn't stretch there is no energy stored. Don't you mean "work is force times distance"- 'work done' is another phrase meaning energy. If you press on a spring it gets shorter. The end moves against a force so work is done and energy transferred from whatever creates the force into the spring. When you press on a rock in comparison, there is no significant energy stored. As above, I was lifting the rock, not compressing it. tension in the rope is equivalent to tension in the spring, is to tension in the mountain supporting the rock If the tension is "in the mountain supporting the rock", then it would be the mass of the mountain that would increase, not that of the rock. Hasn't the mountain just become the equivalent of the mechanism restraining the stressed spring? ,......and think about bringing opposing magnetic poles close- work is done, but if I lock them in proximity, and then do the "calorific mass equivalence test", will I see an increase in the mass of the magnets?) No, the energy is stored in the magnetic field, not in the magnets. I believe the mass of the system would change but not that of the magnets. If released, these magnets would behave very much like the spring. The increased mass of the spring then must be due to the forces between the iron atoms (obviously) in the spring, but outside the iron in the case of the magnets? Incidentally, a small technical note: gravitational effects are a result of what is called the "stress-energy tensor" so in fact pressure creates gravitational effects as well as mass. I don't know GR well enough to comment further but I thought I would mention it in case just to be complete. I don't think it affects our discussion. It might.If pressure contributes to increased gravity, and gravity produces pressure, we have the makings of a perpetual motion machine, or a black hole!? Merry Christmas, George (and I get to open my presents a day before you!!!) |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Red shift and homogeneity | George Dishman | Astronomy Misc | 162 | January 4th 04 09:57 AM |