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No such animal as Proton Rest Mass
18 years 2 weeks ago #17850
by Stoat
Replied by Stoat on topic Reply from Robert Turner
If we were to accept the feasibility of a viscoelastic Le Sage unverse, then light speed gravitons can exist. We should consider them for study, in that we can learn something of the nature of their much faster cousins. Now if two light speed 2 spin gravitons smash into each other, they should produce a very high energy photon.
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18 years 2 weeks ago #17852
by Stoat
Replied by Stoat on topic Reply from Robert Turner
Totally wrong there[] I get a 700hz long wave radio wave from two light speed gravitons smashing into each other. My lame excuse, is that is still a lot of bang for your bucks with something as small as a graviton.
(edit) A sudden thought, A massive star will show this radio frequency of just under 700 hz. If it is about to go nova then the frequency will fall, meaning that the graviton is going faster than c. that suggests a test, as we would have warning of a nova.
I think I'd better add however, that it wouldn't be much of a warning, as the radio waves would travel at c. We might be able to "see" a light speed graviton accelerate to just over c in some fraction of a second. A tricky measurement to make but possible I think.
(edit2) Thinking on this a bit further. We don't know much about the build up to a nova. I reason that the surfaca layer of the star is pretty opaque, so some changees prior to the bang are going to be at the speed of sound for the medium. A seven hundred hertz spike could appear well before the star explodes. it would have a ramp to it from faster than c graviton collisions. Then at some point it would suddenly collapse.
(edit) A sudden thought, A massive star will show this radio frequency of just under 700 hz. If it is about to go nova then the frequency will fall, meaning that the graviton is going faster than c. that suggests a test, as we would have warning of a nova.
I think I'd better add however, that it wouldn't be much of a warning, as the radio waves would travel at c. We might be able to "see" a light speed graviton accelerate to just over c in some fraction of a second. A tricky measurement to make but possible I think.
(edit2) Thinking on this a bit further. We don't know much about the build up to a nova. I reason that the surfaca layer of the star is pretty opaque, so some changees prior to the bang are going to be at the speed of sound for the medium. A seven hundred hertz spike could appear well before the star explodes. it would have a ramp to it from faster than c graviton collisions. Then at some point it would suddenly collapse.
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18 years 2 weeks ago #19025
by Stoat
Replied by Stoat on topic Reply from Robert Turner
I just did a google search for work on that frequency, and yep people are looking for it with regard to binary neutron stars.
I think there will be money to be had from looking at the shape and size of this frequency spike. Sadly though, I think a lot of thought will have to be put into getting ne "boys toys" from it. Maybe a few dollars upgrade to a radio telescope. Not that i'm a cynic of course [][]
I think there will be money to be had from looking at the shape and size of this frequency spike. Sadly though, I think a lot of thought will have to be put into getting ne "boys toys" from it. Maybe a few dollars upgrade to a radio telescope. Not that i'm a cynic of course [][]
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