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The speed of gravity? |
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| Dec8-04, 11:10 AM | #1 |
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The speed of gravity?
I have just learned that gravitaional energy propagates as particles called gravitons and also as waves. I was wondering if gravitons are to gravity as photons are to light, and therefore, what is the speed of gravity?
Does anyone know if this actually exists? |
| Dec8-04, 11:41 AM | #2 |
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The graviton has not yet been experimentally detected, but it is predicted to be a spin-2 boson, with ZERO MASS. The zero mass implies that it would travel at the speed of light.
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| Dec8-04, 11:51 AM | #3 |
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2.The theory of gravitational field propagation through waves is a subject covered in the chapter "weak field limit" of GR (i quantized gravity in its weak limit last spring,so i should be aware of what i'm talking about).The equations of Einstein in the absence of matter in the weak field limit and with an apropriate gauge take the familiar form of the ones for the EM potential for EM flield in flat Minkowski space.That's why we conclude that gravity in the weak field approximation propagates through space-time under the form of waves travelling at "c". 3.The notion of "graviton" is strange to the realm of GR,as it's seen as the quanta of gravitational field. a) No such particles (of spin 2,BTW) have ever been observed. b) Since,till now,there's no ultimate theory of quantum gravity,they're just a theoretical abstraction aimed of fiding a spin 2 particle (partner) in the same spin supermultiplet with the gravitino. Gravitons are to gravity what photons are to light.It's just that we know for sure that photons exist (though our senses cannot feel them,they feel only the "wave" behavior of light),while gravitons...Well,who knows...??? Daniel. PS.Interpretation of full gravity as a field theory just like the ones in the SM,and quantizing it,fail,as the theory obtained is not renormalizabile, (i.e.the values of its observables (like the Green functions) are infinite). |
| Dec8-04, 12:42 PM | #4 |
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The speed of gravity?Second, observations of some neutron star binaries (with at least one member a pulsar) show decaying orbits. The rates of decay very nicely match the hypothesis that energy is being lost from the systems in the form of gravitational radiation, as predicted by GR (some hard working scientists got Nobels for this). Since gravity travels at c in GR, these results provide indirect support for GR and the speed of gravity being c. Third, and most generally, GR has passed all its obsevational and experimental tests to date - including one which would have shown a deviation if GR were out by as little as 1 part in 20,000. While these tests have only probed GR in a limited range of domains (astonishing as that might seem - the tests go right up to the whole universe, size-wise), one can say that there is no experimental or observational evidence, direct or indirect, that even hints at the speed of gravity being anything other than c. |
| Dec8-04, 02:52 PM | #5 |
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The assumption of zero mass flow from the assumption that gravity is an infinite distance force. Zero mass particles would travel a c. Models that show gravity, either by particle or other means propogating at c seem to work better than those that assume a lower speed (although it day to day, this would be unnoticable except for large masses moving a great speeds). |
| Dec8-04, 05:32 PM | #6 |
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Blog Entries: 4
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http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0411158 Massive graviton as a testable cold dark matter candidate |
| Dec9-04, 12:03 PM | #7 |
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just wondering, and please shout at me if I'm way out line, but....
If gravity propagates at c, the aren't all the arguments about the total mass of the universe and it collapsing irrelevant, because the universe is expanding so fast that gravity couldn't keep up and make it collapse. |
| Dec9-04, 01:31 PM | #8 |
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The speed of gravity can be thought as faster than c. Although faster-than-light force propagation speeds do violate Einstein special relativity (SR), they are in accord with Lorentzian relativity, which has never been experimentally distinguished from SR -- at least, not in favor of SR. Indeed, far from upsetting much of current physics, the main changes induced by this new perspective are beneficial to areas where physics has been struggling, such as explaining experimental evidence for non-locality in quantum physics, the dark matter issue in cosmology, and the possible unification of forces
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| Dec9-04, 01:40 PM | #9 |
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Recognitions:
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I'd suggest the sci.physics.faq Does gravity travel at the speed of light for anyone interested in a non-technical summary of mainstream non-crank current information about the speed of gravity. |
| Dec9-04, 03:13 PM | #10 |
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if gravity travels at speed of light. is it speed constant from every frame of reference just like light??
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| Dec9-04, 03:36 PM | #11 |
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Certainly, as this page explains
http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mgravityspeed.html "To put it in technical terms, general relativity is only self-consistent if the speed of gravity is Lorentz invariant (that is, the same for all observers)" |
| Dec14-04, 07:21 AM | #12 |
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I personally think gravity is a natural by product of mass and has no force carrier, but if it does exist the LHC should find it.
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| Dec14-04, 07:23 AM | #13 |
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Has anyone seen the Nyman theory of gravity having no force carrier; it's interesting, whether it's true or not though, who knows?
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| Dec14-04, 07:58 AM | #14 |
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Welcome to Physics Forums Louis Cypher!
Do you have a reference (preferably a peer-reviewed paper) to the Nyman theory of gravity? To what extent is it consistent with GR? How does it stack up against good experimental and observational results (e.g. those cited as tests of GR - which GR passed with flying colours)? |
| Dec14-04, 09:31 AM | #15 |
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I remember reading an article about a year ago about some scientists that due to some rare phenomenon were able to measure the speed of gravity and found that it was the same as the speed of light. I however cannot find that article at this moment therefore I'm not sure I remember corrrectly
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| Dec14-04, 09:52 AM | #16 |
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Welcome to Physics Forums SAV}{VAS!
You may be referring to the work of Kopeikin. There's another thread in PF with an extensive discussion of this, and other aspects of 'the speed of gravity' - here. (BTW, Kopeikin's idea was a good one, and the observational data OK; however, it seems he 'did his sums wrong'; GR predicts an effect in the quasar-Jupiter alignment, but it would be far too weak to be detected with Kopeikin's setup ).
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| Dec14-04, 11:55 AM | #17 |
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You might be talking about this experiment, which failed to actually show that gravity speed = c, on many levels. This site also backs-up my post earlier about the probability of superluminal gravity.
http://www.metaresearch.org/media%20...G-Kopeikin.asp |
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