bcrowell said:
Hi, PAllen,
#94 is interesting. My proof was only for 1 dimension, and was only meant to prove that *some* externally imposed fields were impossible to null out. As you point out, one can construct examples in three dimensions that can be nulled out. For example, the field inside a hemispherical shell can be nulled by adding another hemisphere to complete the sphere.
I'm having trouble visualizing the geometry you're describing in #94. Let's say that I have an externally imposed field \textbf{g}=x\hat{\textbf{x}}, and I want to produce \partial g_x/\partial x=0, while leaving the field itself equal to zero there. Can you tell me what masses you would put at what coordinates in order to accomplish this? (Let's work in units where G=1.)
Nulling in the sense of #66 is definitely impossible in general, in three dimensions without some further restriction on the externally imposed fields, if we say that all partial derivatives up to order n have to vanish. The reason is that I could give you an external field \textbf{g} that had a negative divergence at a point P (as a field created by normal matter typically will), and ask you to null all of the field's first derivatives at P. If you could do this by adding on a nulling field \textbf{h}, then we would have \nabla\cdot\textbf{g}<0, \nabla\cdot(\textbf{g}+\textbf{h})=0, so your field \textbf{h} would have to have a positive divergence, which is impossible without exotic matter.
I've added the one-dimensional thing as an example in my book http://www.lightandmatter.com/html_books/genrel/ch08/ch08.html#Section8.1 (subsection 8.1.3, example 1). There is an acknowledgment to P. Allen at the end of the example. I hope this is OK with you (i.e., you agree that the statements I make in the example are true), and that this is the right form of your name to use.
-Ben
Hi,
Formalities first: fine if you acknowledge me, P. Allen is my actual (partial name). In some more private communication, I could give you more complete attribution, if you want (I have no relation to Microsoft, though we are in the same industry and the same age; bank balance differs).
I don't really want to work out a precise numeric example, but thinking more since post #94, I can make my argument much tighter, and I hope clearer.
Assume a point mass at x=-10, our point of interest (where we want to null g and g' from the source at x=-10) at x=0, and equal (to each other) masses at candidate positions x=1,y=1, and x=1, y=-1. What I am going to argue is by moving the balancing masses further away or closer (along the same line from the origin), and/or changing their angle to the x-axis at the origin (in all cases keeping their distances from the x-axis the equal to each other), we have more than enough degrees of freedom to get any magnitude ratio of g'/g that we want, and that in all cases, the sign of g' for these side masses (taken together) is the opposite of g' from the source at -10 (as is the sign of g). Given that, we find a choice that matches g'/g magnitude for the source we are canceling, then choose masses to match the magnitude for the source values (the ratio g'/g for the balancing masses depends only on distance and angle not on mass).
Ok, put simply (for me), the problem with colinear masses is that g' is positive no matter the sign or value of g. With the off axis masses placed to the 'right' of the origin, we have net g with the correct sign for cancelation, but g' negative, just what we need. This is easily seen by noting that as you move from the left of these masses to the point directly between them, g goes to zero. So we have g decreasing as a funcion of x rather than increasing as for a colinear balancing mass.
To see that we have freedom to match any g'/g magnitude, note that g'/g goes infinity as the balls are moved closer to perpendicular to the x-axis (g goes to zero effectively as cos(angle to perpendicular), g' as sine (same angle)). Note that for some given angle between the balancing balls and the x-axis at the origin, we can make g'/g approach zero by moving the balls further away at the same angle (because g' goes r**-3, while g as r**-2).
Thus, I believe all elements of my argument are established.
My gut feel is that procedures like this will work for higher derivatives, using more balancing masses. The additivity of everything suggest it should work to neutralize any collection of given point source fields. In Newtonian gravity, motion of the source makes no difference (all is instant possition dependent force) except balance balls must move in some complex way.
In GR, my gut is that all this breaks down for moving sources. One line of thought is that I was led to believe this was possible by the spherical shell case. In Newtonian gravity, if this shell rotates, nothing changes. I suspect (you may know for sure) that in GR you get small frame dragging or similar effects. I see no reason to believe these can be canceled. Of course, there are also gravity waves. For E/M waves, the field goes through +/- sign and you can cancel any wave with a phase shifted wave. For gravity waves, there is no negative gravity influence, so I don't see, offhand, how any gravity wave can be cancelled. Thus moving sources in GR seem to produce several types of uncancellable effects. Of course, for weak, slow sources, the Newtonian scheme should work as well in 'practice', given a large supply of self propelled dense matter balls and software to move them as needed.