> since GR is a local principle, based on local translations of vectors etc, there is then no general symmetry rule for energy conservation.
On Saturday, May 9, 2020 at 12:25:41 PM UTC-5, John Clark wrote:On Sat, May 9, 2020 at 7:49 AM Lawrence Crowell <goldenfield...@gmail.com> wrote:> since GR is a local principle, based on local translations of vectors etc, there is then no general symmetry rule for energy conservation.General Relativity and Noether's theorem were both found in 1916, and so physicists knew that there was not a law of conservation of energy, so they must have known the distant past and distant future must be very different from how things are now. So why didn't they know in 1916 that something like the Big Bang must be true and something like the Steady State Theory must be wrong? But the Steady State Theory didn't die till the 1960's.John K ClarkThe bias was the universe "always existed." or is eternal. The idea the universe could have emerged at some finite time in the past sounded simply theological. It was why Einstein introduced the cosmological constant, for without that the universe would in a finite time implode by gravitation. Interestingly a larger cosmological constant is invoked now to model an accelerated expansion of the universe. Hubble found the cosmic redshift and Einstein declared this his greatest blunder. The metric for a cosmology by Friedman, Lemaitre, Robertson and Walker was developed into the 1930. This with the de Sitter metric predicted expansion of the universe. Then came WWII, which shifted the focus of physics and cosmology did not come back until the late 40s. Hoyle, Bondi and Gold in the 1950s expressed their dislike of a finite past to the universe, and they proposed a continuous generation of matter. They argued this was no worse than a one time generation of everything. Tolman argued that in fact with the FLRW nothing in total could be said or measured in any way to have been created in the big bang. Things hung in the balance until Penzias and Wilson found a cosmic microwave background. This clinched the big bang with a hot thermal past.
On Saturday, May 9, 2020 at 3:49:57 PM UTC-6, Lawrence Crowell wrote:On Saturday, May 9, 2020 at 12:25:41 PM UTC-5, John Clark wrote:On Sat, May 9, 2020 at 7:49 AM Lawrence Crowell <goldenfield...@gmail.com> wrote:> since GR is a local principle, based on local translations of vectors etc, there is then no general symmetry rule for energy conservation.General Relativity and Noether's theorem were both found in 1916, and so physicists knew that there was not a law of conservation of energy, so they must have known the distant past and distant future must be very different from how things are now. So why didn't they know in 1916 that something like the Big Bang must be true and something like the Steady State Theory must be wrong? But the Steady State Theory didn't die till the 1960's.John K ClarkThe bias was the universe "always existed." or is eternal. The idea the universe could have emerged at some finite time in the past sounded simply theological. It was why Einstein introduced the cosmological constant, for without that the universe would in a finite time implode by gravitation. Interestingly a larger cosmological constant is invoked now to model an accelerated expansion of the universe. Hubble found the cosmic redshift and Einstein declared this his greatest blunder. The metric for a cosmology by Friedman, Lemaitre, Robertson and Walker was developed into the 1930. This with the de Sitter metric predicted expansion of the universe. Then came WWII, which shifted the focus of physics and cosmology did not come back until the late 40s. Hoyle, Bondi and Gold in the 1950s expressed their dislike of a finite past to the universe, and they proposed a continuous generation of matter. They argued this was no worse than a one time generation of everything. Tolman argued that in fact with the FLRW nothing in total could be said or measured in any way to have been created in the big bang. Things hung in the balance until Penzias and Wilson found a cosmic microwave background. This clinched the big bang with a hot thermal past.I think we should keep in mind that we have absolutely no knowledge of what happened when the universe "began", or even IF it began! All we know is that it was incredibly dense and hot, a few Planck intervals AFTER a presumed beginning. Now, assuming energy is not conserved, it's still a reasonable question about where the lost energy goes, as the reddening proceeds. Could it go into changing the cosmological constant? AG
> Now, assuming energy is not conserved, it's still a reasonable question about where the lost energy goes,
On 9 May 2020, at 23:49, Lawrence Crowell <goldenfield...@gmail.com> wrote:On Saturday, May 9, 2020 at 12:25:41 PM UTC-5, John Clark wrote:On Sat, May 9, 2020 at 7:49 AM Lawrence Crowell <goldenfield...@gmail.com> wrote:> since GR is a local principle, based on local translations of vectors etc, there is then no general symmetry rule for energy conservation.General Relativity and Noether's theorem were both found in 1916, and so physicists knew that there was not a law of conservation of energy, so they must have known the distant past and distant future must be very different from how things are now. So why didn't they know in 1916 that something like the Big Bang must be true and something like the Steady State Theory must be wrong? But the Steady State Theory didn't die till the 1960's.John K ClarkThe bias was the universe "always existed." or is eternal. The idea the universe could have emerged at some finite time in the past sounded simply theological.
It was why Einstein introduced the cosmological constant, for without that the universe would in a finite time implode by gravitation. Interestingly a larger cosmological constant is invoked now to model an accelerated expansion of the universe. Hubble found the cosmic redshift and Einstein declared this his greatest blunder. The metric for a cosmology by Friedman, Lemaitre, Robertson and Walker was developed into the 1930. This with the de Sitter metric predicted expansion of the universe. Then came WWII, which shifted the focus of physics and cosmology did not come back until the late 40s. Hoyle, Bondi and Gold in the 1950s expressed their dislike of a finite past to the universe, and they proposed a continuous generation of matter. They argued this was no worse than a one time generation of everything. Tolman argued that in fact with the FLRW nothing in total could be said or measured in any way to have been created in the big bang. Things hung in the balance until Penzias and Wilson found a cosmic microwave background. This clinched the big bang with a hot thermal past.It is interesting in a way that a sort of anti-theism worked against the big bang.
It was considered in conflict with material dialectic in the USSR and in China after 1949 was strictly forbidden to be taught or studied. The big bang was taken up by various religions or churches. Lemaitre as a priest lobbied against the Catholic Church taking this up as some theology of divine creation. He argued this was evidence of some form of "radioactive decay," and so not necessarily theological.
In recent times with the big bang now being better understood as a manifestation of inflation, curiously a vacuum transition similar to the decay that Lemaitre foresaw, religious communities have come increasingly against big bang. A part of that is this does not conform to biblical literal creation.
LC--
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> Of course, if I ask the question, it implies conservation of energy.
> do you plan to deal with my question related to the UP,
On Sun, May 10, 2020 at 7:42 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Of course, if I ask the question, it implies conservation of energy.Then why do you imply conservation of energy when we specifically said energy is not conserved? Nobody thinks Entropy is conserved so it would be silly to ask where it came from, and the same would be true for energy if it is also not conserved. The second law of thermodynamics can be derived by logic alone but the first law can not be, conserved energy is not more logical or more mathematical than non-conservation, the only reason we ever thought energy was conserved was that it seemed to be conserved in most of our experiments, but now we have seen a few examples, such as the cosmological redshift, where energy is not conserved. When new information is found our thinking must change, that's science.
> do you plan to deal with my question related to the UP,I saw no question related to the UP, I just saw a string of unrelated words with a question mark at the end.
John K Clark
> All our experience indicates that energy is conserved,
> Haven't you heard? Energy has mass equivalence, so one can ask how the energy/mass "vanished". AG
Thinking further about this, I prefer my original hypothesis above, that the cosmological red-shift doesn't imply real loss of energy. It's just an apparent effect due to relative motion, the usual Doppler shift. AG