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3-dimensional implications of a black hole |
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| Sep20-12, 09:50 AM | #18 |
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3-dimensional implications of a black hole
thanks MFB and IamLoser, now I'm engaged in this - http://www.phys.uu.nl/~thooft/theorist.html - and I will do it. I have not retained my math knowledge well enough some am starting from the beginning.
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| Sep20-12, 09:56 AM | #19 |
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| Sep20-12, 10:16 AM | #20 |
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I'm coming from the premise that where there is matter, there is not space, and where there is space there is not matter. That's how I was approaching this. I wasn't thinking of an imaginary sense of "volume."
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| Sep20-12, 10:30 AM | #21 |
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| Sep20-12, 11:29 AM | #22 |
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I don't see how, but the sea sponge is a bad example because there are too many preconceptions about its structure. So put the sea sponge aside and use a cubic foot of solid wood instead.
If the cubic foot of solid wood and cubit foot of lead are both tethered off the space shuttle, there would be more space within the dimensions of the wood than the lead. If the lead and the wood were to run into each other at a high speed, the wood will show a perceptible dent (without any splintering off in this eg.) - there is still the same amount of wood, but it's been compressed by its mass displacing space inside. The lead may have a tiny dent, so it displaced much less space then the wood, partly because there was less space available to displace. |
| Sep20-12, 11:57 AM | #23 |
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Mentor
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| Sep20-12, 12:19 PM | #24 |
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"space" is, as I understand it, a way to conceptualize the relationships between objects
in other words, it's not really a "something", instead it's just a very intuitive way to understand reality I think you're using the word "space" and "volume" interchangeably |
| Sep20-12, 01:59 PM | #25 |
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| Sep20-12, 02:53 PM | #26 |
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Nice good example, aluminum and lead. (I'll be more careful also with my use of space and volume.)
There must actually be space all over the place inside a mass, being warped by all the matter in there and making gravities pulling every which way relative to the relationship of the matter - otherwise there would be no structure, no order. And one must have more space inside its dimensions than the other - differentiating the characteristic/structures of the two. |
| Sep20-12, 03:25 PM | #27 |
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I can't say much on there being more spacetime inside an object, as I don't know. |
| Sep22-12, 04:59 AM | #28 |
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Either way of looking at it makes sense. They way I see it, either way works equally well, so you may as well use the same definition everyone else does in order to avoid misunderstandings. I have a policy of refusing to argue about definitions. I'll just use whatever definition the other guy wants. (Political discussions in particular often devolve into endless arguments about definitions. Since definitions are arbitrary, to me this seems pointless.) Some is sure to point out that according to Einstein matter and space do affect one another, but this is so complicated and hard to work with that physicists avoid using this theory. Instead they stick with Isaac Newton's much simpler ideas, which are almost always accurate enough. |
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