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Is the Universe Leaking Energy? Tamara M. Davis |
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| Jun11-12, 03:49 PM | #1 |
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Is the Universe Leaking Energy? Tamara M. Davis
Interesting Article on Cosmology...some good insights, no math, illustrations. Lots for us novices to consider.
By Tamara M. Davis a Scientific American article] Is the Universe Leaking Energy? http://www.physics.uq.edu.au/downloa...iAm_Energy.pdf My synopsis: Emmy Noether found that conservation of energy relies on time symmetry. The changing shape of the universe due to cosmological expansion means that spacetime is changing....is not symmetric..... and so conservation of energy does not apply. So the universe does not violate the conservation of energy; rather it lies outside that law’s jurisdiction. One interesting insight: Photons traveling in an expanding universe appear to lose energy via cosmological redshift. What about matter: You find that the de Broglie wavelength of particles increases by exactly the same proportion as a photon’s wavelength does! Thus light and matter seem to behave in exactly the same way when it comes to 'energy loss'. Some here may not like so much her description of Doppler shift and implied cosmic microwave background radiation redshift: In small enough regions the universe makes a pretty good approximation of flat spacetime. But in flat spacetime there is no gravity and no stretching of waves, and any red-shift must just be a Doppler effect.... so the relative motion of the emitter and observer means that they see photons from different perspectives and not that the photons have lost energy along the way. |
| Jun11-12, 03:55 PM | #2 |
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1. Noether theorem refers to continuous symmetries of the Lagrangian of the theory, the ground state may as well break that symmetry (spontaneous symmetry breaking). Nevertheless, the conservation law associated with it is still valid (along classical trajectories, for the correlation functions--propagators, there are Ward-Takahashi identities);
2. You are mixing the continuous time-translation with the discrete time-reversal symmetry; 3. In GR, the stress-energy tensor is coupled to variations of the metric tensor. The gravitational field also carries energy-momentum. |
| Jun11-12, 05:54 PM | #3 |
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Yes, Davis is saying the putative energy loss of photons due to cosmological redshift is an illusion, which is consistent with the position taken by Bunn and Hogg in http://arxiv.org/abs/0808.1081.
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| Jun11-12, 06:30 PM | #4 |
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Is the Universe Leaking Energy? Tamara M. DavisIt's possible my attempt at a quick summary misstated Davis' position,,,she does mention continue time translations as a requirement.... |
| Jun11-12, 10:11 PM | #5 |
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I don't believe that there really is such a thing as a photon, a little packet traveling around. I think that "photons" are only meaningful when energy and matter interact. Otherwise they have no existence.
The total energy of the field is conserved. This is all that matters. |
| Jun12-12, 12:27 AM | #6 |
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| Jun12-12, 11:35 PM | #7 |
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| Jun12-12, 11:46 PM | #8 |
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| Jun12-12, 11:48 PM | #9 |
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| Jun12-12, 11:52 PM | #10 |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoelectric_effect |
| Jun13-12, 09:37 AM | #11 |
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The Davis article concludes very neatly, unambiguously, and correctly, that conservation of cosmological energy is OUTSIDE the theory of 'conservation of energy'. [It is not part of general relativity.] In curved spacetime, velocity, distance, speed, energy do not have the 'classical' appearance of flat spacetime and so 'conservation of energy' loses it's meaning. Regarding 'photons don't really exist' are you sure the physicsts didn't mean that you do not have to think of light in free space that way?? Maybe that the wave perpsective is preferable or satisfactory?? I'd agree with that picture. As Chalnoth posted, it sure is tough to maneuver around the photoelectric effect without photons!! |
| Jun13-12, 11:45 AM | #12 |
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So that is my question to you. Can it exist? Because if you say NO, I believe there are testable consequences in an suitably open universe (since a photon headed to deep space would never encounter any matter and therefore cannot be emitted in that direction). Or is that crazy talk?
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| Jun13-12, 11:55 AM | #13 |
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You can argue that atoms are mathematical abstractions that don't "really exist". You can argue that we only sense things though sensory input so the entire external universe doesn't "really exist." If you are making the statement that photons don't exists and neither to electrons, you are making a philosophical statement about the meaning of existence, and that's not an argument I care to get into. If you argue that photons don't exist but electrons do, then this makes zero sense. |
| Jun13-12, 11:57 AM | #14 |
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You take an electron and a position together and you get two photons. You take two photons and bang them together and you get an electron/positron pair. The only difference is that electrons have rest mass, which changes the Doppler equations. |
| Jun13-12, 12:09 PM | #15 |
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| Jun13-12, 05:52 PM | #16 |
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While this effect is pretty negligible today, it was the dominant form of gravitation in the very early universe. |
| Jun17-12, 07:03 PM | #17 |
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Chronos:
How then does the universe cool? Does an 'illusion' cool it down? |
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