[Physics] Physics Digest, Gravitational Waves

Hans van Leunen jleunen1941 at kpnmail.nl
Fri Oct 6 19:35:28 CEST 2017


To All 
All equations are collected in https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Hilbert_Book_Model_Project/Quaternionic_Field_Equations
Hans
----Origineel Bericht----
Van : tufail.abbas at gmail.com
Datum : 06/10/2017 18:39
Aan : physics at tuks.nl
Onderwerp : Re: [Physics] Physics Digest, Gravitational Waves
 
  Dear Randy,
 
 
  
 
 
  Your paper is really interesting!!
 
 
  
 
 
  I can see that your paper has lot of hidden equations.
 
 
  
 
 
  Could you please share the version of paper with those equations included.
 
 
  
 
 
  Thanks,
 
 
  
 
 
  Tufail Abbas 
  
  
   
   
    On 6 Oct 2017 7:37 pm, "Randy O. Wayne" <
    row1 at cornell.edu> wrote:
    
    
     
      
       
Dear Carl Johnson,
       
I think that even if the wavelength of gravitational waves were 3 x 10^6 m and they traveled at 3 x 10^8 m/s, it would only take 0.01 s to pass through a detector. For other reasons I favor La Sage gravitation over general relativity. I am attaching a paper of mine that is in press.
       
Thank,
       
Randy
       
 
       
 
       
 
       
        
         
From: Physics [mailto:physics-bounces at tuks.
            nl] On Behalf Of cj at mb-soft.com
Sent: Friday, October 6, 2017 10:57 AM
To:physics at tuks.nl
Subject: Re: [Physics] Physics Digest, Gravitational Waves
        
       
       
        
 
        
         
Some of you guys in this group might have an ideal opportunity to become known.
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
Recently, the Nobel Prrize Committees showed how "political" their decisions are and where actual science is not that important to them.  They gave some Nobel Prizes in Physics regarding Gravitational Waves that have allegedly been detected.
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
Please look into the following.  The Newtonian Gravitational formula is essentially identical to the Coulomb's Law formula.  Gravitational mass instead of electrical charge and the value of the Constant arre the only differences.  Everyone knows the similarity of Electromagnetism and Gravitation, where gravitation is so relatively weak by a factor of trillions.
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
About fifteen years ago, I did the math regarding both of them.  You guys can do it as well, and I am sure you will be as surprised as I was at the math results.
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
It is easy to calculate that for electromagnetism, we can see an "entire wave" of microwaves in a fraction of a billionth of a second.  Simple Physics.
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
Fifteen years ago, I did that same simple math for gravitation, and I found that "one wave length" clearly takes many thousands of years to complete.  Yes, gravitational waves certainly DO exist, but they are SO large that in anyone's life, no one can witness even a tiny fraction of "one wavelength".  Specifically, if a gravitational wave was passing through our region right now, a single wave is currently in the Orion Belt stars and here at the same time.  Yes, that gravitational wave must carry incredible Energy in it, but to try to DETECT such a wave is clearly essentially impossible.
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
A wavelength of thousands of light years, and a frequency of a single wae per thousands of years.
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
Those Researchers never bothered to mention such frequency or wavelength.  The Nobel Committee never had a clue of this enormous difficulty regarding any experiment to try to detect any sinusoidal wave that is so huge and slow.  If anyone would (or will) ever notice this wavelength and frequency issue, they would see how impossible it is for us humans to detect such things (even though I certainly agree that they exist.)
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
If ANY ONE would do the Math and inform the Nobel Committee about this issue, they would see the "emptiness" of such a specific Nobel Prize.  Why don't one of you do that?
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
I certainly respect the work of many of my fellow Physicists.  But hadn't Nobel considered awarding a Prize to those two "physicists" who had claimed to produce "cold fusion" some time back.  It was only after actual Physicists examined those clasims that it became obvious that the claim was foolish.  Unfortunately, this is probably again the situation regarding detecting Gravitational Waves.
        
        
         
 
        
        
         
Carl Johnson
        
        
         
 
        
       
      
     
     
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