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Old Jun30-09, 02:49 PM       Last edited by earamsey; Jun30-09 at 03:03 PM..            #1
earamsey

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Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradiction

Is it just me or is something smelling rotten about unifying gravity with the fundamental forces? Didn't science unanimously agree that Einstein's "Theory of Relativity" correctly explained gravity as not a force but curvature of space-time? In fact, I thought that GR was promoted from a theory a law of nature.

In consideration of GR I think it is strange to persist about the existence of gravitons and attempt to unify a pseudo-force like gravity with anything. My humble opinion is that it is bad science to contradict existing LAWS Nature like GR and then construct billion dollar machines to understand why the contradiction doesn't unify nicely with others.

What if the graviton appears at LHC, will GR be demoted from a law of Nature back to a theory? And at what point does science advance forward and stop stumbling backward over gravity? Finally, experiment did not grant GR acceptance as a law of nature, apparently this requires faith, should GR be added to the Holy Bible as a deified grace of God?
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Old Jun30-09, 02:59 PM                  #2
George Jones

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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

1) The LHC is not going to used to look for gravitons.

2) I not sure what the difference between a law and a theory is.

3) No scientific theory is ever proved.

It is true that we have no experimental evidence that contradicts GR in any accepted way, but this does not mean that theoretical phyiscs should grind to a halt.
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Old Jun30-09, 03:38 PM                  #3
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

My humble opinion is that it is bad science to contradict existing LAWS Nature like GR
Good thing you were humble or we could make fun of such a statement.

Name me one theory that has been right from the start: not Ptolmy, Not Copernicus, not Alchemy, not Newton, Einstein is closest, but quantum mechanics begs to differ, etc,etc...don't be fooled into thinking we understand much of anything....
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Old Jun30-09, 03:39 PM                  #4
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

Originally Posted by George Jones View Post
1) The LHC is not going to used to look for gravitons.
True it is not builit specifically to look for them but there are experiments designed to detect them should they occur.

Originally Posted by George Jones View Post
2) I not sure what the difference between a law and a theory is.
In science, I understood it to mean set assumptions or principles that try to explain a natural phenonmena, like gravity of which one attempts to validate with proof. A law is like the rule book for nature and hard ever violated by nature.

Originally Posted by George Jones View Post
3) No scientific theory is ever proved.
Then why is GR used everyday in GPS and it can be shown that curved space refracts light?

Originally Posted by George Jones View Post
It is true that we have no experimental evidence that contradicts GR in any accepted way, but this does not mean that theoretical phyiscs should grind to a halt.
I agree but why was GR accepted if no one wants to live by it?
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Old Jun30-09, 04:58 PM       Last edited by earamsey; Jun30-09 at 05:18 PM..            #5
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

Originally Posted by Naty1 View Post
Good thing you were humble or we could make fun of such a statement.
Ok, if GR is untrue the gravity is not result of curved space-time although no one can deny it curves space-time. Before disregarding a theory, or law like GR, I thought, one must have verifiable proof or a more correct alternate. I thought this is how scientific process worked.

It get's confusing to me at times because there are too many schools of thought. And a few I notice beleive in both GR and graviton.

Originally Posted by Naty1 View Post
Name me one theory that has been right from the start: not Ptolmy, Not Copernicus, not Alchemy, not Newton, Einstein is closest, but quantum mechanics begs to differ, etc,etc...don't be fooled into thinking we understand much of anything....
Einstein, unlike Ptolmy; Copernicus; Alchemy; Newton, was able to verify his findings down to decimal points of with verified and quantified predictions. None of the others did that. Although newton explained almost all the known orbits of planets, he did not accurately predict an unknown and unseen phenomena like bending of light by gravity.

[A sidebar about the Newton and Einstein]
Although great men of science, I think both newton and einstein are given too much credit. Their accomplishments did required leaps of faith, arcane insight (especially Einstein) and prodigious amount of effort, but essentially all they did was connect the dotted lines. The true genius, and hero to science, is Max Planck and his work on black body radiation.
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Old Jun30-09, 06:19 PM                  #6
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

Originally Posted by George Jones View Post
3) No scientific theory is ever proved.
Originally Posted by earamsey View Post
Then why is GR used everyday in GPS and it can be shown that curved space refracts light?
Hi earamsey,

George is correct, this is a general point about science. Theories are not proven, they are verified or falsified. If an experimental result agrees with a theory's prediction then the experiment is said to verify the theory, and it gives evidence that the theory is good. However, it does not prove the theory for the simple fact that there can be more than one theory that predict the same result for any given experiment and the experiment cannot distinguish between two such theories.

Gravitational time dilation and gravitational lensing are experimentally verified predictions that any correct theory of gravity will have to make, but that does not constitute a proof of any theory that makes those predictions. Do you see the difference?
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Old Jun30-09, 07:45 PM                  #7
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

[A sidebar about the Newton and Einstein]
Although great men of science, I think both newton and einstein are given too much credit. Their accomplishments did required leaps of faith, arcane insight (especially Einstein) and prodigious amount of effort, but essentially all they did was connect the dotted lines.
I disagree completely and even find this offensive. Connect the dots ? You are are arrogant and ignorant, sir. I find your opinions worthless.
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Old Jun30-09, 11:19 PM                  #8
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

Originally Posted by George Jones View Post
2) I not sure what the difference between a law and a theory is.
A theory attempts to model behaviour, giving some insight. A law simply describes it.

Newton's Law of Gravity simply states the observed relationship between mass, distance and the forces experienced: F = G* (m1*m2/r^2).

Einstein's theory attempts to model how this relationship works.
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Old Jun30-09, 11:55 PM                  #9
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

GR and gravitons are no more incompatible than Maxwell's equations and photons. Just as photons are what you get when you quantize propagating wave modes of the EM field, gravitons are what you get when you quantize propagating wave modes of spacetime.
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Old Jul1-09, 12:56 PM                  #10
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

Originally Posted by earamsey View Post
Is it just me or is something smelling rotten about unifying gravity with the fundamental forces?
It wouldn't smell bad at all if you knew anything about these theories, or at least what a theory is.

Originally Posted by earamsey View Post
Didn't science unanimously agree that Einstein's "Theory of Relativity" correctly explained gravity as not a force but curvature of space-time?
No. Scientists agree that it makes much better predictions about the results of experiments than previous theories, but that's it.

Originally Posted by earamsey View Post
In fact, I thought that GR was promoted from a theory a law of nature.
There's no such thing as a promotion from a theory to a law.

Originally Posted by George Jones View Post
2) I not sure what the difference between a law and a theory is.
I disagree with DaveC's answer. A law is just a small part of a theory that can be expressed succinctly in the form of a sentence or an equation. For example, Newton's law of gravity is a small part of Newton's theory of gravity.

Originally Posted by George Jones View Post
It is true that we have no experimental evidence that contradicts GR in any accepted way,
This is misleading in my opinion. There are no experiments that contradict GR's predictions about gravity, but there are of course many thousands of experiments that prove that matter doesn't behave the way that GR says it behaves.

Earamsey, this is why GR needs to be "unified" with QM. We know that the way that GR describes matter isn't just wrong, but extremely wrong. The reason why the predictions of GR can still agree with experiments to a ridiculous degree of accuracy is that the effect of the microscopic details on anything we can measure (in an experiment where GR is distinguishable from Newtonian gravity) is many orders of magnitude smaller than the measurement's margin of error.

Originally Posted by earamsey View Post
Then why is GR used everyday in GPS and it can be shown that curved space refracts light?
This doesn't prove GR correct. It only proves that GR makes better predictions than Newton's theory about the results of these specific experiments.

You can never prove a theory to be correct. Experiments can only tell us how accurate the theory's predictions are. Even if the predictions are within the margin of error, we still don't know if the prediction would pass the test of a better measurement, or even if it would pass the same test tomorrow.

Originally Posted by earamsey View Post
And a few I notice beleive in both GR and graviton.
There's a theory involving gravitons that makes essentially the same predictions as GR.
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Old Jul1-09, 03:58 PM                  #11
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

Originally Posted by Fredrik View Post
I disagree with DaveC's answer. A law is just a small part of a theory that can be expressed succinctly in the form of a sentence or an equation. For example, Newton's law of gravity is a small part of Newton's theory of gravity.
But that only defines a law in terms of a theory. In fact, a law stands alone, i.e. the law can exist whether or not there is any theory to model it.
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Old Jul2-09, 12:09 AM                  #12
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

Take Newton's law of gravity for example. It doesn't "stand alone" in any way. It just tells us what the force is, and this is useless information without the rest of the theory. In particular we need the relationship between force and acceleration. And even that relationship doesn't make sense without the assumption that space can be mathematically represented by LaTeX Code: \\mathbb R^3 and time by LaTeX Code: \\mathbb R . All of these assumptions are part of the theory.
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Old Jul2-09, 12:36 AM       Last edited by keepitmoving; Jul2-09 at 12:50 AM..            #13
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

do the gravitons cause the warping of space by moving between our visible dimensions and the extra dimensions? - sort of like gravitons dragging the extra dimensions into and out of our visible dimensions?
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Old Jul2-09, 12:57 AM                  #14
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

Originally Posted by keepitmoving View Post
do the gravitons cause the warping of space by moving between our visible dimensions and the extra dimensions? - sort of like gravitons dragging the extra dimensions into and out of our visible dimensions?
I don't know what that even means, but since it's possible to describe gravity in terms of gravitons without introducing any extra dimensions, I have to say that the answer is "no".
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Old Jul2-09, 01:01 AM                  #15
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

suppose the extra dimensions exist and can decompact and then enter the visible dimensions as result of graviton movement causing a warping of the visible dimensions?
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Old Jul2-09, 02:15 AM                  #16
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Re: Unification of Gravity versus General Relativity -- The Ubiquity of Contradictio

That's a lot of supposing, and I don't know what it would mean for one dimension to enter another.
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