Re: Is gravity relative?




<brentlmt@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:0f20f6ae-f84a-485a-9962-d6cc1cf23253@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Apr 8, 3:52 pm, "Sue..." <suzysewns...@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Apr 8, 6:35 pm, brent...@xxxxxxx wrote:


Thanks for the input.

I need to just put my ideas on the table.

As I said, SR was easy to understand because the geometries
of matter and energy both follow straight lines. They work together.
But when you add acceleration and gravity their geometries diverge.
If you apply a force to an object, the energies within that object
"bend" away from the physical structure of matter. This is inertia.
If an object is supported by a force within a gravity well, it's
space-time that curves the energies away from matter. This is weight.
If the force is removed, the energies realign with matter and the
object
accelerates downward. This is gravity.

Also using the term "curved" space is misleading. I believe that
matter
compresses space around itself. Time advances slower at my feet than
above my head because there is more space between quantum particles
which slows down interactions and slows down time. Let's say that it
was possible to create a box to encapsulate space/space-time/aether.
In the box is a clock. If I shrink the box and compress space, the
clock
slows down. If I expand the box, the clock speeds up. And if I bend
the
box, the clock accelerates into the curve.

If we apply this principle to the universe, then at the moment of the
big
bang, time was going exceedingly slow, so that any expansion would
have
been extremely fast... inflation anyone?

I also need to address curving light. If I'm in a room within a
significant gravity well and I point a laser across the room, the
light from the laser will curve downward. But if I sight down
the beam I won't see it curve. It will look straight because
information returning to me will "unbend" coming back. It is
the room that will appear to bend into a horn-shaped geometry.
All matter will appear larger or smaller according to its
blue/red shift.

You can now apply that to a non-rotating black hole. If
you want to know what a non-rotating black hole would
look like you first graph out the space around it. You
choose the point of observation. From that point you
send out beams in various directions mapping their paths
AND wave length shifts onto the graph of the black hole.
You then translate those beams into straight lines which
include "normalizing" the wavelengths. That is what
a black hole would look like. The event horizon would
appear larger, flatter and farther away. And if you
were to drop a clock (or anything else) you would NOT
see the object slow down as it fell. It would instead
appear to grow larger as it fell. And also redshift to black.

Remember, this is what you would observe, not what would
happen.

And one last word on black holes. The ratio of matter
to space is what determines time. Someday we will
witness the transformation of a neutron star into a black
hole. As matter within the neutron star compresses, the
spatial distances between quantum particles collapses.
When this occurs, time will speed up which in turn will
increase its mass. This is my prediction. Perhaps
in my lifetime this will occur within a binary system
and we'll see the effect on its partner thus vindicating
me.

I'm sure many of you will consider me either a
lunatic or a heratic. My hope is that someone
might be curious enough to see if this model fits
reality... either way, I'm just too damn tired to
care at the moment... g'night all

====================================
When the tooth fairy gives me money you'll be vindicated.





.



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    ... But when you add acceleration and gravity their geometries diverge. ... "bend" away from the physical structure of matter. ... Use a light clock for this analysis. ... the clock accelerates into the curve. ...
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