Re: Gamma-rays and Gravity




"RP" <no_mail_no_spam@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1194177448.905291.76890@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Nov 3, 11:52 am, "RH Nigl" <rhn...@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I believe these questions are opposite to current thinking
regarding the effect 'gravity' has on gamma-radiation. That
thinking (and testing), suggesting, (at least to me), that 'gravity'
as a force, somehow 'precedes' gamma-radiation.

My question is: Could the opposite condition be true?
To wit, could gamma-radiation affecting particles, at the
quantum level linking those particles inextricably to the
entire EM spectrum (in spacetime), actually cause 'gravity'?
That is, I mean, I think this notion is opposite to current
thinking, so, if true, please correct my misunderstanding.

And a couple of follow up questions: Could this suggested
'linkage' of particle to wave be hypothetically expressed
as the wave-particle duality?

Also, could gamma-radiation be considered a 'self-promulgating'
wave--a 'fundamental' force of sorts?

Thanks Sue,

R H Nigl
blogOptica

You're suggesting that gravitons are gamma photons? Why single out
gamma rays? Frequency is relative.



The instant a particle impinges on an electromagnetic field,
it becomes inextricably entwined in that field and at the
quantum level information is irretrievably altered, (the
'arrow of time'?), through all possible quantum states.

This 'entwinement' of particles (and therefor information),
from single subatomic entities, to astronomic structures,
(including 'human' observation), by the full spectrum of
electromagnetic waves flowing through, around and about
the entities (particles), and, due to the nature of atomic
characteristics, (ie., spin, charges, polarity, attraction/repulsion,
etc.), generates 'compactification' of the electromagnetic waves
(a force which is commonly accepted to influence atomic structure,
and I ponder, memory and thought), inexorably forces the particles
(singular, or in aggregate), to the averaged center of the mass.

Gravity? I dunno. It certainly is a long sentence!

'Sir, I beg your pardon ... I'm not a physicist, I'm a savant!
I write stories and I just may include you as a villan.'. ;-)

R H Nigl


.



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