Oh, it wasn't so bad
Somewhat to my surprise, people care. Hmm... it wasn't nearly as bad as I said...
sorry!.
ranger said:
Wont it just be easier to tell us? I'm eager to know why what mathman said is wrong.
Oops, nothing. I was "kicking" about a bunch of posts which came later on. Here are my pedantic corrections/comments:
madphysics said:
If light is bent around a black hole, does it bend around all points of gravity, however small?
I think madphysics is trying to ask whether light bends around any compact object, or indeed any concentration of mass-energy in some region, or just around black holes. The answer is of course "yes".
madphysics said:
And even if it doesn't, do the other waves of the spectrum bend around black holes?
Light bending does not depend upon the frequency of the light--- this is very important, if it weren't true, we'd see colored fringes in those Hubble images of lensed galaxies. But in any case I suspect madphysics meant to ask if "massless" radiation which is not electromagnetic radiation--- in particular, gravitational radiation, also experiences bending. The answer is "yes", because wave packets of such radiation have (roughly speaking) world lines which are null geodesics (in vacuum).
magnetar said:
yes! light bend around all points of gravity!
yes! the other waves of the spectrum also bend around black holes!
Well, from what I just said you can see that I wouldn't put it this way.
Brad_Ad23 said:
As the medium becomes denser then in general yes, the effective speed of light decreases.
[snip]
Yes, as stated it will move around all sources of gravity. But the effects will be very very very small for small sources of gravity.
Sorry, Brad, that looks OK too.
Dr.Calpol3 said:
you have to remeber that black holes have one of the strongest gravitational pulls. they pull in a lot of thing, including light.
All objects with mass M have pretty much the same "gravitational pull". The interesting thing about neutron stars and black holes is that they are so much more compact than ordinary objects, which means that you can get a lot closer without striking "the surface" (or encountering the horizon). Since the tidal forces scale like M/r^3, smaller r for given M means much larger tidal forces.
sanjeeb said:
physically speaking light really slows down a bit
sanjeeb is thinking of the "Shapiro light delay effect", but this name is potentially misleading since, at the level of tangent spaces, light always travels at c (in vacuum). This effect is really a global effect; in a sense "the effective speed of light" over a large course can be different from c. One way to understand that this is no contradiction is to realize that even in flat spacetime there are multiple operationally significant notions of distance in the large for accelerating observers (which at very small scales all reduce to the notion given by the metric tensor). In particular, radar distance, the notion relevant to the Shapiro effect, can exhibit odd behavior when a light path travels near a massive object such as the Sun.
These corrections are probably incomplete since at least two of the other posters are in my ignore list, in part because I tired of correcting their frequent misstatements concerning gtr.
OK, shame on me for not reading more than the last half of the thread. I'll try not to make such sweeping statements in future
