|
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Mark Forums Read |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
When an electron changes its orbit energy is released or obsorbed. My question is that does the variatiions in the radius of an orbit cause a gravitational system to release energy? If so, could this not or does it justify the GRBs say if two supermasses have a rapidly changing orbital radius?
|
|
|||
|
It looks that even in an atom that radiates a photon, the photon carries with itself part of atom's mass equal the photon's energy (divided by c^2). It must be case of gravitational radiation and one may call the photon a "graviton" if one is interested only in the loss of mass by the atom.
|
|
||||
|
Quote:
|
|
|||
|
A question I always had, a body in a perfectly
circular orbit around a dense star. How does the advance of perihelion effect manifest itself? A slightly faster orbit time than Newtonian or by degrading to an eliptical orbit? |
|
||||
|
Quote:
|
|
||||
|
A binary neutron star can make gravitational radiation, but it won't produce the significant "kicks" that publius is talking about. That must happen from a very sudden and very powerful pulse at the moment highly compact objects merge, or from an integrated asymmetry over time in a very strong gravitational wave source (very compact fast orbits). I don't know which dominates but I would suspect the former.
|
|
|||
|
Quote:
I do have another question related to this. If a system absorbs mass does the background radiation lose or gain heat from the process or have I jumped too far? Also, as masses move closer - grav radiation is released; is the inverse true as well? meaning if the masses are moving apart do the bodies absorb more gravitational radiation? |
|
||||
|
Quote:
In Newton, circular orbital speed is always less than radial free fall speed at a given radius. In Schwarzschild, circular orbital speed exceeds free fall speed at some point, and becomes light speed at 1.5 Schwarszschild radii. (and this is unstable -- the last stable circular orbit is at 3 radii). -Richard |
|
|||
|
I worry about the quantum numbers too however if gravitons are emited from the atom at the same time when a photon is (when the atom loses its h*nu energy) with is the same as its loss of gravitational energy) then at least there is a strong suspicion that it is the same particle. And so the same kind of radiation, namely electromagnetic. Since otherwise where do you see the difference between the two? There must be such places if those two radiations are different.
|
|
||||
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
|
|||
|
Quote:
Forum rules prevent further digressions. However, I am e-mailing this post to my significant other, to see if she laughs hard enough to spray coffee on the screen. Seriously, Ken, your explanations are excellent as always. Thanks, John M. |
|
|||
|
Thanks Richard. It could have been interesting
to have unstable states in GR. And I am reminded of something I read that this part of GR is because of an abberation effect whereby the fast moving body senses the shift in position of the star. Which strongly suggests gravity being caused by a flux at lightspeed. Probably too simple an explanation. And anyway Think of two equal sized bodies orbiting each other. Again faster than simple Newtonian I expect. |
|
||||
|
Quote:
Don't hold me to it exactly because I'm not sure of the details, but I think the kick does indeed occur during the last moments when they "hit" each other. These things are a complex mess to say the least and can only be tackled numerically. And numerical GR solutions are something else. IIRC, it took some ridiculous amount of total CPU time on some big parallel processor farm specially designed to solve them just for the last orbit before merger. I've forgotten the details, but I remember reading a description of just how difficult and numerically back-breaking the thing was. A big problem was sanity checks. They were going off in uncharted waters -- no analytical solutions or other simplified solutions to compare with and keep things between the ditches. It would be bad to waste wads of CPU time after some numerical hiccup through the solution into la-la land. Another interesting thing I remember is the final "kick" depends strongly on the spin of the merging black holes (the mind boggles at the complexity of two merging Kerr holes!). You've apparently some highly complex "spin-orbit" interactions going on that contribute to the final linear kick. -Richard |
|
|||
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
|
||||
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
|
|||
|
Is a theory, in which graviton had spin 1, possible? Otherwise there has to be a graviton (or several) coupled to each photon. How is this problem handled in the theory of gravitatinal waves?
|
|
||||
|
One can only go with the current best understanding of the data compiled so far, and that understanding says that gravity waves have nothing directly to do wth photons. In string theory, there is some deeper connection between everything, but so far no such connection is useful or predictive. At the level that most problems are treated, it is important to distinguish a graviton from a photon, and there is not a need to "couple" them. I have no idea what the science of gravitons and photons will look like a thousand years from now, but I do know that precise language is required to use science effectively.
|
|
|||
|
Thanks for your answer Bigsplit sorry I did
not see it yesterday. Should have scrolled up more. Dont think we need Heisenberg here in classical territory. I think I read somewhere that gravitational waves do not carry energy so no absorption would seem possible. But then what the hell are they The fast speed of neutron stars I understood to be the result of unsymmetrical collapse of supernovae. After all only a manmade gadget achieves true uniform implosion because it is made to.(you know what!) A supernova must start at one point of the final burning shell and the infalling spread out from this point around the shell. Must be in the models that people try. And spin comes in somewhere I suppose. |