Sujet : Re: How can gravity itself escape a black hole?
De : ross.a.finlayson (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Ross Finlayson)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativityDate : 01. Nov 2024, 01:11:21
Autres entêtes
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References : 1
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On 10/31/2024 02:56 PM, LaurenceClarkCrossen wrote:
When gravity moves at the speed of light?
Well what you do is just provide a Lorentzian,
that's a sort of FitzGeraldian, with regards
to the relativity theory, about the absolutes
and ideals and the absolute and relative of
motion or magnitude or time, here motion,
that results the invariant theory of the
relativity theory is satisfied the Lorentzian,
then what Einstein does is put GR first in
front of SR, so that SR-ians, which are types
who put SR first, are made local, while the
FitzGeraldian Lorentzian frames out the space
and the spatial, then SR gets what Einstein
called the "spacial" or say "SR-spacial" as
with regards to that "SR is local", in as
regards then to _why_ that "c_g", the constant
that is gravity's speed, can be that "c_g >> c",
that c_g is much, much greater than c, while
that c is yet a constant, that, gravity only
moves at the speed of light at the center
of the black hole anyways, and is otherwise
always as going out instead, like a white hole.
If you've never heard of Dirac's positronic sea
there's another one Einstein's white-hole sea.
... To keep field theory from falling apart, for example.
Anyways whatever fulfills the "Lorentzian" the
SR-ians would only be able to say "I can't tell
the difference".