Recent content by NotJimmy
-
N
Graduate Do gravitational waves propogate slower when blocked by mass
What's the actual mechanism that slows down the gravitational waves though? I think I can understand how light waves slow down in a gravitational field, since they get bent on their path (correct me if that's the wrong interpretation), but how does that work with gravitational waves? I'm just...- NotJimmy
- Post #5
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
-
N
Graduate Do gravitational waves propogate slower when blocked by mass
Is it noticeable at all when you're dealing with very large masses? Like, let's say I had a 'transmitter' on one side of VY Canis Majoris moving around an object with great mass and generating gravitational waves. On the other side, I had a 'receiver' that filters out all of the noise and...- NotJimmy
- Post #3
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
-
N
Graduate Do gravitational waves propogate slower when blocked by mass
I'm not sure exactly how to phrase this question, but I was thinking earlier about electromagnetic waves being absorbed by atoms and 'slowing down' the speed of light. Do gravitational waves propagate slower when blocked by, say, a really massive object? In the same way that light slows down...- NotJimmy
- Thread
- Gravitational Gravitational waves Mass Waves
- Replies: 5
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
-
N
Undergrad Resting masses of isolated neutrons versus neutrons in atoms
So, I think I see how some of their mass becomes the energy binding the nucleus together, but why doesn't that energy stay as mass? Like, if the mass of a neutron comes from the binding energy of the quarks, then why doesn't more mass come from the binding energy of a nucleus? What's the...- NotJimmy
- Post #4
- Forum: Quantum Physics
-
N
Undergrad Resting masses of isolated neutrons versus neutrons in atoms
I'm a high school student reading through a book on the discovery of the Higgs boson, and, among several other things, there's one part that I don't understand completely. I understand that the Higgs field is what gives mass to lots of particles that would otherwise be the same without the...- NotJimmy
- Thread
- Atoms Higgs boson Mass Neutron Neutrons Strong interaction
- Replies: 3
- Forum: Quantum Physics