Bill_K said:
Yes, that's exactly what does happen! And it's a good thing too. Because here's a further example: consider two equal masses in relativistic motion about each other. Normally the attraction between them is diametrical, towards the center of mass. But if the attraction between them were retarded, each would feel an attraction to a point which lags behind the other, causing the orbital motion to slow down and eventually come to a halt!
:
This is a good example case you are describing here.
In a little more detail:
Two equal masses in identical elliptical orbits (with some eccentricity) around the common barycenter.
During the recessional phase, the retarded postion of the point of emission is a distance D
r ,less than the actual instantaneous position distance D
i relative to the point of reception. D
r < D
i SO the negative acceleration arising from this is greater than the force should be from the actual position by the inverse square difference in distance
Comparably, during closing the D
r > D
i so the positive acceleration is less than the Coulomb factor for the instantaneous distance by the same degree.
Obviously leading to a continual decrease in orbital velocity and catastrophic orbital decay as you described.
I am proposing that the g field associated with the retarded position is anisotropic, polarized, at least partly due to aberration.
So in the first case, of recession, the reduced field flux (varying with angle) due to aberration counters the increase due to less distance.
Likewise in closing. .The increase in field strength due to aberration increases the positive acceleration, countering the decrease due to the greater distance of the retarded position.
I am suggesting that in both cases the flux vector, transported along the null geodesic between the retarded position and the location of the other mass would retain the directional components of the actual (un-aberrated ) direction of emission. Which vector would point to the actual , instantaneous position of the gravitating body.
I don't know the accepted view having never encountered a mention in the context of electrodynamics , but it seems clear to me that the Guass and Coulomb laws lead to the conclusion that the field of a moving charge must be aberrated.
That the animation that A.T. provided is incorrect in it's depiction of the flux lines being isotropically distributed relative to the moving charge.
In the analogous case of light: If we have an isotropic constant emitter in motion. Say an incandescent sphere and we look at the emission from a discrete time interval, we have an expanding shell of photons with a spatial thickness.
That thickness would not be uniform, but would vary, Thickest at the point at the rear (wrt motion) and smoothly decreasing to the point aligned with the direction of travel.
So the photon density would likewise vary, but inversely. Minimal at the rear to maximal at the front.
Then the aberration factor would also result in a further, angle dependent, differential shift of concentration towards the front.
Add the Doppler shift in frequency/energy which also effects a differential energy increase from the back to the front.
So looking at the cloud of photons from constant emission as a photonic energy field surrounding the emitter, it is obvious that it is highly polarized due to three distinct but complementary factors.[ I ignored the dilation factor affecting both frequency and density because it is a scalar with no directional dependence and doesn't affect field distribution, only the overall magnitude of those components.]
SO if EM propagation as photons, EM field propagation as electrostatic interaction between charges and gravity propagation are analogous and mediated by lightspeed interactions through virtual particles, then the question would seem to be; Which, if any, of these three factors would
not apply in all three cases?
My hasty inference would be that velocity dependent aberration and anisotropic density would both apply to electrodynamics and gravity but not Doppler.
Any insights regarding the paper posted by PeterDonis or flaws in my reasoning appreciated.
Thanks