![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Aug 8, 6:51*am, Tom Roberts wrote in
sci.physics.relativity: Darwin123 wrote: On Aug 7, 1:46 pm, (Daryl McCullough) wrote: Darwin123 says... Your examples reinforce my the idea that SR is a weak field limit. In the *zero* field limit, GR turns into SR. When the field is nonzero but small, it is hard to interpret GR as SR + corrections. Yes. SR is basically GR applied to a manifold with no mass-energy, and the topology of R^4. * * * Okay, here is a problem. The Michaelson Morley experiment was not performed in a zero field environment. It was not even performed in a free fall environment. The experiment was performed in a system that was accelerating toward the center of the earth due to a combination of gravitational force and contact forces. The gravitational field was not zero, and the gravitational potential between the apparatus and the center of the earth was not zero. How come the Michaelson Morley experiment "explain" the results of the Michaelson Morley experiment? Physics is a quantitative science. One can COMPUTE how large an error is made by applying SR to an experiment like this, rather than the full, rigorous application of GR (which is VASTLY more difficult and complicated). The answer is that the errors due to that approximation are many orders of magnitude smaller than the experimental resolution. See below. So this is not really a problem. * * *The same question can be asked on the Hafele Keating experiment. The Hefele Keating experiment was not performed in an environment with zero gravitational field. Yet, Hefele claimed the the time difference in the Hefele Keating experiment could *mostly be explained using SR, without recourse to the full general relativity theory. Their actual paper discusses the effects of both gravitation and motion. Both are important; both were used. In the approximation to GR that they used, there are two terms, one involving velocity relative to the ECI (though IIRC they did not call it that), and one involving gravitational potential. They called the two terms "SR effect" and "GR effect", which is a misnomer, as BOTH are part of that approximation to GR. However, according to you there would have to be a zero gravitational field in order for SR to be better than Newton. You are reading stuff into other posts that simply is not there. * * *Again, if this is true than the classic SR experiments aren't valid. They were all done in significant gravitational fields. By significant, I mean if there was no gravity the devices would not have followed the paths given. For tabletop optical experiments on earth, the primary effects of gravity are canceled by contact (E&M) forces from the table. Yes, the light rays will fall due to the earth's gravitation. Work it out, and you'll find the effects of this are significantly smaller than experimental resolutions. See below. * * None of the classical SR experiments were performed in free fall. Yes. But none were invalidated by this, because one can COMPUTE the effects of gravity on their measurements, and in all cases are found to be negligible. I repeat: physics is a QUANTITATIVE science. * * *My question is how to distinguish an experiment that supports SR alone from an experiment that supports GR. Basically: is gravity important? For a light ray traveling a few meters on earth, it is not. In all cases one can COMPUTE how accurate it is to use the approximation of SR. The honest answer may be that there is none. This would imply that SR is not self consistent. See above. There is no such implication. * * *So when I analyze the Michaelson Morley experiment, I should transform to a free falling coordinate system. Sure. Let's do that. For simplicity choose the freefalling frame that is at rest relative to the apparatus when a given phase of the light beams start their travel. They travel about 10 meters, which takes about 30 ns. During 30 ns that frame falls (1/2)*g*t^2=0.5*9.8*(3e-8)^2=4e-15 meters, which is significantly less than one wavelength (which is about 5e-7 meters). And this fall is perpendicular to the light paths, so the relevant angle is atan(4e-15/10)=4e-16 and the variation in path length is less than 10*(1-cos(4e-16))=8e-31 -- VASTLY smaller than they could possibly measure using fringes separated by 2.5e-7 meters. * * * * This is still true for experiments like Brillet and Hall * * * * that are roughly a million times more sensitive. Or else use General relativity. Or else ignore the results, because they are consistent with Newtonian mechanics. No. Just estimate how large the error is in neglecting the falling of the above frame, and realize that SR is an EXCELLENT approximation for this experiment. * * *I am now totally confused as to where on earth SR is valid. It sounds almost like SR is never valid on the surface of the earth. SR is valid for experiments in which gravitation is not significant. This includes most tabletop optical experiments, and virtually all particle experiments, etc. That includes all of the tests of SR, and most non-gravitational terrestrial experiments. Tom Roberts Honest Roberts is special relativity valid "for an accelerated observer in a region without any significant gravitation (e.g. in Minkowski spacetime)": http://groups.google.ca/group/sci.ph...2a006c7d508022 Pentcho Valev: CAN THE SPEED OF LIGHT EXCEED 300000 km/s IN A GRAVITATIONAL FIELD? Tom Roberts: Sure, depending on the physical conditions of the measurement. It can also be less than "300000 km/ s" (by which I assume you really mean the standard value for c). And this can happen even for an accelerated observer in a region without any significant gravitation (e.g. in Minkowski spacetime)." Pentcho Valev |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Are there forces in relativity? | Pentcho Valev | Astronomy Misc | 0 | August 7th 08 01:14 AM |
Are there forces in relativity? | Pentcho Valev | Astronomy Misc | 0 | August 6th 08 09:24 AM |
Are there forces in relativity? | Pentcho Valev | Astronomy Misc | 0 | August 5th 08 09:48 PM |
DO RELATIVITY ZOMBIES UNDERSTAND RELATIVITY HYPNOTISTS? | Pentcho Valev | Astronomy Misc | 12 | June 5th 07 12:14 AM |
forces in a Big Bang theory versus forces in an Atom Totality theory | [email protected] | Astronomy Misc | 0 | January 12th 06 08:41 AM |