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On 4 Apr, 23:02, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote:
On 4 Apr 2007 06:03:49 -0700, "George Dishman" wrote: On 3 Apr, 00:38, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On Mon, 2 Apr 2007 22:25:42 +0100, "George Dishman" wrote: "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message Try to take more care with your terms henry, the theory is GR. That the orbit is elliptical and precessing is the best model fit. If the faith is strong enough George, you will find evidence of it everywhere. You are a prime example, but that is beside the point, you should still know what the words "theory" and "model" mean and be able to use them correctly. George, just show me evidence that light from differently moving sources really does travel at the same speed through space. The Sagnac experiment shows it locally. The Sagnac experiment has been repeated between communications satellites by measuring the arrival times directly. Now what evidence can you show that suggests anything different? George |
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Henri Wilson wrote:
George, I don't believe the pulses originate anywhere near the neutron star itself. Running away Henry? Show me the maths that led to your conclusion. The obvious fact is that they would be traveling at maybe c/2 towards Earth if they did. They would be extremely redshifted. Maybe they are! Maybe they start out as UV moving at c/2 wrt us. You seem to think that quantities are important in science. You suggest that the speed of light leaving a neutron star might be c/2, a specific quantity. Another quantity is implicit in your paragraph above. You know that the signal received from J1909-3744 is in the radio UHF band, at 1.3 GHz, or a wavelength of 230 mm. You must know that UV has a wavelength of around 100 nm. And you must know that if the speed of the wave was divided by two, the wavelength would be multiplied by two: 100 nm * 2 = 200 nm But the result you want on the right side of that little equation is 230 mm. Your guess that the light would need to be emitted as UV in order to be received as radio was off by a factor of over a million. The correct value for the initial wavelength is 115 mm. How could you possibly be so enormously far off on such an elementary calculation? Is it because you have no intuitive sense of scale? That is what it looks like. You know that a wavelength of UV is shorter than a wavelength of radio, but to you that means it is maybe half as long. No wonder you can't understand how things work. Leonard |
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On 4 Apr, 23:53, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote:
On Wed, 4 Apr 2007 22:23:12 +0100, "George Dishman" wrote: "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 2 Apr 2007 22:34:19 +0100, "George Dishman" wrote: "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message ... On Sun, 1 Apr 2007 15:04:46 +0100, "George Dishman" Given that you now accept the huff-puff nature, you need to reconsider your justification for saying that Cepheids that are currently thought of as isolated might actually be part of a binary. Every one I read about seems to have a companion star. Put "solitary cepheid" into Google and you get a number of hits. At least one was a survey listing both categories with similar numbers of entries. I looked it up earlier at work and don't have the reference here and it was in postscript but I'm sure you can find a readable version with a little hunting. I'm sure there are many that have very slow orbit periods. A thought just ocurred, are you perhaps seeing a bias by looking mainly at milliseond pulsars? These are fast because they get "spun up" by matter falling in from a companion. They are fast because the stuff that made them had some net angular momentum. The "stuff that made them" was a star that exploded and stars don't spin that fast, they would fly apart through centrifugal force in the process. They have to get down to their very small size first then be spun up to speed. They all orbit the galaxy, so what. The orbital period needs to be a few years or less for any significant effects to show up. They orbit all kinds of objects, not just the galaxy...and other objects orbit them. Many orbits will involve more than one other object and will be unstable. The question remains, so what? other than in fairly tight binaries and near misses of unbound objects, the speed and acceleration will be too low to produce any significant brightening. That depends entirely on distance. ...although extinction plays a part. Time compression can occur at large distances. Not with the levels of speed equalisation distances that are given by your program. Only tight binaries are going to show any effects at all. I'm now of the opinion that not much unification occurs in intergalactic space (below the WDT). Most occurs within the confines of a galaxy....particularly near the source.....but this could vary enormously from one situation to another. All our discussions have been on objects in our own galaxy. The ISM is what matters as it is denser than the IGM. It isn't difficult to produce variations of 1.5 mag. ..but 3 is about the limit with the BaTh before the critical distance is reached and the curves become peaked. Try it now that your program shows the red and blue curves separately. Take a Cepheid you think you can model with a varation of 1.5 mag or more, match the red curve to the velocity profile and tell me how much variation the green curve predicts. The remainder is intrinsic. As a result of my dropping the 'incompressible photon' theory the red curve has now been replaced by the green one. The question remains, if you match the velocity curve what fraction of the luminosity variation is due to c+v and what fraction is intrinsic? There still appears to be no theory that explains any intrinsic brightness variation of huff-puff stars. This is a slightly better introduction than the bulk: http://www.astro.utoronto.ca/~mhvk/AST221/pulsators.pdf George, have a look at their velocity and brigtness curves, about half way down. Do you notice something? I notice you are not acknowledging that your claim that there was no theory (or more accurately model) was wrong. In every paper I have read about cepheids, the authors admit the have no theory to link the surface movement to the brightness curve. Read some textbooks, not papers. Papers focus on moving the body of knowledge forward and don't usually cover existing 'state of the art'. I won't comment on that without doing some study for myself. The theories involved would include thermodynamics, radiation pressure, fluid dynamics and the bit that a lot of simpler pages leave out is the importance of opacity. The stellar structure forms a relaxation oscillator. That's the theory. Yes Henry, the stuff you claimed didn't exist. George |
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In article om,
Leonard Kellogg wrote: Observed delays in signals from spacecraft and pulsars as they pass the Sun exactly match the Shapiro delay times ^^^^^^^ predicted by general relativity. The magnitude of the delay varies smoothly as a function of distance from the Sun, and matches every spacecraft and pulsar signal at every distance from the Sun, from grazing incidence to 180 degrees away. In other words, the observed delay curves match the predicted Shapiro delay curves with no detectable deviation from an *exact* fit. ^^^^^^^ The observed delay in signals coming from PSR J1909-3744 exactly matches the delays in signals from spacecraft and ^^^^^^^ pulsars, and also exactly matches the delay predicted by ^^^^^^^ general relativity, if the PSR J1909-3744 signals are passing a white dwarf with a mass of 0.204 solar mass, in an orbit inclined 3.4 degrees from edge-on to us. The observed delay curve for PSR J1909-3744 matches the predicted Shapiro delay curve with no detectable deviation from an *exact* fit. ^^^^^^^ The mass for the companion star found from the observed Shapiro delay is also exactly the mass required to match ^^^^^^^ the observed luminosity and spectrum of the white dwarf. It is also exactly the mass required to match the observed ^^^^^^^ orbit period according to Kepler's and Newton's laws. Leonard Please don't misuse the words "exact" and "exactly" like that! Exact matches (i.e. matches with zero error - not just negligible, but exactly zero, error!) exist only in pure mathematics. Matching observations to models means you'll have to deal with real-world observations, and they have errors which, no matter how small, *always* are larger than zero. There might be an exact fit of course, but you won't know until you're able to perform measurements with zero error. And that will never happen. Please refrain from using the words "exact" and "exactly" in contexts involving observational data. Instead use "accurate" and "accurately" !!! -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/ |
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On 5 Apr, 00:14, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote:
On 4 Apr 2007 02:49:56 -0700, "George Dishman" wrote: On 4 Apr, 09:51, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On 4 Apr 2007 00:30:36 -0700, "George Dishman" wrote: On 4 Apr, 00:17, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: Nobody claimed it was in line with any GR predictions, you said it was "exactly what the BaTh predicts". That paper you referred me to claimed it was. I'm surprised but I don't have that one handy. Are you sure you aren't thinking of the Hulse and Taylor paper? Pulsar rate slowing is due to the magnetic field and I don't think GR even comes into it, nor does ballistic theory AFAICS. Every second paper I read about pulsars makes some kind of claim that they support GR. That's because they are a very good vehicle for testing GR in strong field conditions that are hard to produce other ways. No, it's because relativists are becoming desperate. ROFl, Henry you are a card. Some are perhaps getting frustrated because every test performed shows GR is perfect but we know it is incompatible with QM. They NEED a discrepancy so they can test string theory and hopefully point at something better. Why is it still so important to 'prove' GR ... Because in science any theory is only trusted in regions that have been tested. The more extreme the conditions under which it is tested, the more we can be sure the predictions will be accurate. Also there is always the hope that some small deviation will be found which can be the beginning of the next theory. That's how science works. Well I might suggest tha BaTh is the one that will replace all of ths nonsense that has prevailed for over 100 years. Not a chance, it can't even explain Sagnac, and tell me Henry, how does ballistic theory explain gravity? ... when people like yourself are absolutely sure it is correct? Who said I was sure it was correct? I am fairly sure it will need changes to accomodate QM and may need a change to explain dark energy (not dark matter though). You also need change to accommodate the absolute aether that you obviously require to make the theory work. Keep repeating that lie often enough and you might convince yourself it is true even though your animation proved it false. Oh, I forgot, you left out the second part so you didn't have to admit you did that. restoring context George, the BaTh says all light leaving the pair will be slowed slightly, causing an overall redshift that may or may not be counterbalanced by the blue shift arising from its accelerated approach to our galaxy and Earth. . Henry, have a look at the earlier message in this thread where we discussed this: . http://groups.google.co.uk/group/sci...3b2a017ef89b9b . Your conclusion was: . Right so the signal arrives earlier, it is not a delay. The gravitational redshift is identical in each case as is the eventual speed. . that's right. . When the star is on the near side, the bending of light by the dwarf more than compensates for the increase in average light speed. So The BaTh says that there should be a shapiro type slowing. Let's see the maths Henry. If you are right then you can add that curve to you program and then we will see if you can really match the curves. George, I don't believe the pulses originate anywhere near the neutron star itself. Running away Henry? Show me the maths that led to your conclusion. The obvious fact is that they would be traveling at maybe c/2 towards Earth if they did. They would be extremely redshifted. Maybe they are! Maybe they start out as UV moving at c/2 wrt us. Try to change the subject again Henry? I am still waiting for you to show your maths that says ballistic theory predicts a delay for the Shapiro effect. I don't believe the effect to which you are refering is necessarily a shapiro type effect. I am not going to continue to speculate about something I don't believe happens. Fine, if you think you can match the curves without it but you will then be in the position of explaining why something that does happen in the Solar system doesn't happen in the double pulsar system where we know they are in an eclipsing configuration. Until I can find more indo about the dwarf - eg, its brightness curve and spectral data - I wont comment. Why do you need to know about the dwarf to explain an effect within the solar system? That is the weakest excuse you have come up with yet. George, the pulse we detect is NOT just a magnetic one. Somewhere along the line EM is generated and sent in many directions. Hte theory says something about charges being moved along the magnetic field. That doesn't add up because charges would more likey want to move ACROSS the field. Correct, in fact the charges move in spirals around a field line which means it is highly accelerated which means they radiate. It is called syncrotron radiation as Jerry told you. OK maybe.. It is a mojor energy loss in accelerators, hence the name. but how far away from the neutron star does this occur. I say it could continue for LYs. The star rotates at 435 Hz. At what radius would the field be moving tangentially at the speed of light? It can't be more than 115 km by mental arithmetic. Think before typing Henry. No, the excitation would take far too long to decay and the pulse would probably have a longer tail. theories, theories..... Common sense Henry, you cannot heat up a stellar mass and cool it down again in 45 microseconds. Get real for goodness sake. It isn't a stellar mass. It's a pocket of gas...being momentarily ionised as the beam flashes through. Rubbish, 45 microseconds is 13km so that is the maximum radius of your pocket even if the whole thing was heated and cooled instantly. A bigger region would produce a longer pulse as the light from the limb would take longer than the light from the facing surface. Now work out the surface brightness given that we see the signal in RF but not visible so it must be cool, then work out the luminosity. There's no way you can get anywhere near the energy levels observed. You know you can say just about anything because nobody is going up there to prove you wrong. There are nuts out there who will argue almost anything. That's funny coming from you George. Look at Sean's idea on how light travels in a cycloid! No. The BaTh expects the same kind of delay due to bending and increased light path lengths. I was wrong about the 180 difference. OK, so now show me the maths you used to find that there is an overal delay. It should be the same as the GR delay ... Nope, if you do the maths, it is an advance. As I asked, if you disagree, show me your calculation. The calculation should produce GR's result..or thereabouts. There is no reason why it should and we went over the ballistic model in the previous post, reference above, and you folllowed why it is an advance. It is the opposite of what GR predicts. and the pulses should start out at maybe c/2. ...this is why I don't believe the pulses are actually produced near the pulsar itself but at a considerable distance away. The slow initial speed would just give an overall distance value that is higher than actual, but only by a few light hours at most and we don't know the distance better than tens of light years, and since the error would be constant, it doesn't have any effect we can measure. So you still believe the speed aof all the emitted light miraculously adjusts to c wrt little planet Earth, do you George? c wrt the 'space'through which it is travelling. That is what your "extinction" (or "speed equalisation" as I prefer to call it) means, isn't it? No George. That's your aether idea. It was your phrase "quality of space" that gave me that impression. Mine is 'speed wrt other light going in the same direction'. Now that is nuts. How does one pulse know what any other pulse is doing Henry, are there superluminal particles flying between them to transfer momentum and equalise their speeds? How does each pulse know which other pulses to match to, they can't equalise with light from other stars going the other way or they will all stop !!! 'Speed' is not a good word though...better to say, "the relative positions of photons moving in any one direction tend to become stabilized with distance". Hilarious Henry, it's great watching you backpedal when you have shot yourself in the foot :-) OK. If you can add a curve for the ballistic theory Shapiro effect, then we can really see how well you can match the observations. I have finally managed to use your method to add the contributuons of two members of a binary. The programming has nearly driven me up the wall. Neat but I think we generally only need to treat them separately, at least for pulsars and Cepheids. Probably....and many variables are orbitted by a WCH. What? Spectroscopic binaries where only a composite light curve is available would be a different matter of course. Yes. These can be interesting. Easy but uninformative. Anyway have another look at that reference you gave to the brightness and velocity curves of cepheids. It is exactly what I have been saying., They are the same curve...the only differences being due to contributions from the other member of the pair. This is really terrific evidence in favour of the BaTh. No it isn't. I'm still waiting for you to calculate how much is due to c+v and how much is intrinsic for one of these examples. You will understand why it isn't evidence in your favour when you do that. George |
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On 4 Apr 2007 22:17:27 -0700, "Leonard Kellogg" wrote:
Henri Wilson wrote: just show me evidence that light from differently moving sources really does travel at the same speed through space. Take an introductory physics or optics course at any college or university. Sydney, Canberra, and Melbourne should each have several capable of serving your needs. Talk with the instructor before registration if you can and tell him or her that you wish in particular to learn about measurement of the speed of light from moving sources. There has never been a OWLS measurement from a source at rest, let alone a moving one. You are really showing your ignorance now. The measurement is not difficult but it is something that takes a bit of effort and initiative. Getting the help of other students makes all the difference in the world. Leonard Einstein's Relativity - the greatest HOAX since jesus christ's mother. |
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Paul,
I'm using the expression "exact match" to mean a match to within the ability to measure. Is that objectionable? A rational person would not mistake a set of measurements which cannot be distinguished from the predicted values for infinite precision of each measurement. Every measurement has some uncertainty, and allowing for that uncertainty, the matches I referred to are exact. Leonard |
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On 5 Apr 2007 00:32:01 -0700, "George Dishman"
wrote: On 4 Apr, 23:02, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On 4 Apr 2007 06:03:49 -0700, "George Dishman" wrote: George, just show me evidence that light from differently moving sources really does travel at the same speed through space. The Sagnac experiment shows it locally. The Sagnac experiment has been repeated between communications satellites by measuring the arrival times directly. George, I appreciate that you want to change the subject away form pulsars now that, with your help, I have shown why the whole of astronomy is wrong. Thank you anyway for refering me to that paper about cepheids, which again proves my theory correct. As I have been pointing out, according to BaTh, the brightness and velocity curves should be the same.... or almost....and guess what. THEY ARE!!!!!!!! Now what evidence can you show that suggests anything different? George Einstein's Relativity - the greatest HOAX since jesus christ's mother. |
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George,
Henri Wilson wrote: I still can't understand their claims about phasing. I expected you to respond to that, or I would have, except that I'm not certain what Henri's confusion is. Leonard |
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![]() "Leonard Kellogg" wrote in message ups.com... George, Henri Wilson wrote: I still can't understand their claims about phasing. I expected you to respond to that, or I would have, except that I'm not certain what Henri's confusion is. Leonard It's simple enough, Wilson doesn't know what 'phase' means. If you try to explain it to him he says "No". |
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