1) What necessitates the use of complex numbers (whereas in GR only real numbers are used)?QM exhibits interference so it must have wave-like phases that can add and subtract. It predicts probabilities which must be positive numbers. So one way to do this mathematically is to have probability amplitudes, Psi, that are the "square root" of probabilities, Psi*Psi (where * denotes the Hermitian conjugate), that have phases so they can interfere. Then the dynamics are linear in the Psi.
It is conjugate pairs that fail to commute. See attached.2) What necessitates the postulates that some, but presumably not all operators are non commuting?3) With respect to 2), why is the non commuting difference i*h (or i*hbar)?
What ABOUT waves in spacetime, that is gravitational waves? What's waving, and do they interfere with each other? AG
> As I recall, the gravitational potential is the negative derivative of the gravitational force, but if there's no force in GR, how is that measured? AG
> Is the gravity wave detected by measuring the vibrating change of the distance between the two separated locations of the detector? If so, how is this a variation of spacetime, instead of just a measurement of spacial differences? AG
On Thu, Mar 20, 2025 at 11:47 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Is the gravity wave detected by measuring the vibrating change of the distance between the two separated locations of the detector? If so, how is this a variation of spacetime, instead of just a measurement of spacial differences? AGLIGO detected the peak to peak displacement that a gravitational wave caused,
it does not detect the RMS power in a wave, that's why LIGO's ability to detect gravitational waves only decreases by a factor of 1/r not by 1/r^2 as conventional telescopes that use light or any form of electromagnetic waves do. However gravitational waves with enormously longer wavelengths can and have been detected by variations in time, not space, by using pulsars, a.k.a. neutron stars. They detected a gravitational wave "hum" with wavelengths light-years long that were almost certainly caused by the millions of merging supermassive Black Holes, each being billions of times more massive than the sun, that have occurred since the Big Bang.It is also been propose that when Thorium 229 nuclear clocks are perfected they could be used to detect gravitational waves.
> What exactly is waving, space or spacetime,
2idr
> Generally speaking, what are the wave lengths of those space variation waves, and how are they measured?
\
> What exactly is waving, space or spacetime,Spacetime. So if you detect a variation in space caused by a gravitational wave then you can use Einstein's equations to figure out what the variation in time must've been, and if you detect a variation in time you can figure out what the variation in space must be. As Einstein's teacher Hermann Minkowski said: "Henceforth space by itself, and time by itself, are doomed to fade away into mere shadows, and only a kind of union of both will retain an independent reality".
Interesting. I keep thinking of spacetime as one thing which is measured, but that's really not the case. AG2
On Sun, Mar 23, 2025 at 11:18 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Generally speaking, what are the wave lengths of those space variation waves, and how are they measured?LIGO is able to measure the distance between two mirrors 2 1/2 miles apart to an accuracy of 1/10,000 the width of a proton. And you need that sort of accuracy if you want to detect gravitational waves. They achieve this astounding level of precision by measuring the interference effects between two laser beams.John K Clark See what's on my new list at Extropolis
>> LIGO is able to measure the distance between two mirrors 2 1/2 miles apart to an accuracy of 1/10,000 the width of a proton. And you need that sort of accuracy if you want to detect gravitational waves. They achieve this astounding level of precision by measuring the interference effects between two laser beams.
> So they measure an interference pattern. How do they know it's a gravitational wave? AG
Correction: the two LIGO installations are in Louisiana and Washington state. not Oregon as I originally said.John K Clark See what's on my new list at Extropolis
On Sunday, March 23, 2025 at 1:06:06 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:Correction: the two LIGO installations are in Louisiana and Washington state. not Oregon as I originally said.John K Clark See what's on my new list at ExtropolisWhat do you mean by L shaped, if there are two separate detectors? AG
n0we3bOn Sun, Mar 23, 2025 at 2:47 PM John Clark <johnk...@gmail.com> wrote:On Sun, Mar 23, 2025 at 2:36 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> LIGO is able to measure the distance between two mirrors 2 1/2 miles apart to an accuracy of 1/10,000 the width of a proton. And you need that sort of accuracy if you want to detect gravitational waves. They achieve this astounding level of precision by measuring the interference effects between two laser beams.> So they measure an interference pattern. How do they know it's a gravitational wave? AGLIGO is L shaped with each leg being 2 1/2 miles long, theory says gravitational waves should shrink the distance between one leg at the same time it's expanding the distance in the other leg, nothing else could do that. And to make sure they have two identical facilities, one in Louisiana and the other in Oregon, if it's a gravitational wave then the two detectors should measure the same thing at almost the same time because gravitational waves move at the speed of light, any slight delay between the two can help them figure out the direction the gravitational wave is coming from.e3bJohn K Clark See what's on my new list at Extropolis
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On Monday, March 17, 2025 at 9:45:50 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 3/16/2025 1:51 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
1) What necessitates the use of complex numbers (whereas in GR only real numbers are used)?QM exhibits interference so it must have wave-like phases that can add and subtract. It predicts probabilities which must be positive numbers. So one way to do this mathematically is to have probability amplitudes, Psi, that are the "square root" of probabilities, Psi*Psi (where * denotes the Hermitian conjugate), that have phases so they can interfere. Then the dynamics are linear in the Psi.
It is conjugate pairs that fail to commute. See attached.2) What necessitates the postulates that some, but presumably not all operators are non commuting?3) With respect to 2), why is the non commuting difference i*h (or i*hbar)?
Brent
That's the definition of conjugate pairs, that they don't commute.
I notice that E and t are also considered conjugate pairs, but since t is a parameter in QM and not an operator, how can that be intelligible? AG
On 3/29/2025 8:40 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Monday, March 17, 2025 at 9:45:50 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 3/16/2025 1:51 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:1) What necessitates the use of complex numbers (whereas in GR only real numbers are used)?QM exhibits interference so it must have wave-like phases that can add and subtract. It predicts probabilities which must be positive numbers. So one way to do this mathematically is to have probability amplitudes, Psi, that are the "square root" of probabilities, Psi*Psi (where * denotes the Hermitian conjugate), that have phases so they can interfere. Then the dynamics are linear in the Psi.
It is conjugate pairs that fail to commute. See attached.2) What necessitates the postulates that some, but presumably not all operators are non commuting?3) With respect to 2), why is the non commuting difference i*h (or i*hbar)?
Brent
That's the definition of conjugate pairs, that they don't commute.No it's not. They are variables related by a Fourier transform.
I notice that E and t are also considered conjugate pairs, but since t is a parameter in QM and not an operator, how can that be intelligible? AGI've posted it before. In quantum mechanics energy and the time per unit change of a variable are conjugate variables. So they satisfy an Heisenberg uncertainty relation, often written [math]\Delta E \Delta t \geq \hbar[math\] . This is sloppy though and not quite right. What is right is given any operator A and the Hamiltonian H defining the time evolution of A, then [math]\Delta A \Delta H \geq \frac{1}{2} \hbar [d<A>/dt][math\] .
Brent