- Oct 16, 2005
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Another idea/question I had recently, this time about the gravitons that we haven't actually discovered yet.
I think that because every other force we know can only propagate through wave-particles, we assume the same for gravity (we also assume it's quantized but that's a different topic). If gravitons travel at the speed of light or less, then one would expect them to experience the same gravitational effects. That's the odd part I guess, why should they feel gravity if they're the source of the effect...I'm not really sure at this point but an object has a gravitational field and gravitons still have to pass through it.
If light can't escape a black hole, why should gravitons?
I thought about this and came up with 5 or 6 half-assed answers to the question but they all have flaws at some point. I think the only explanation is that gravitons are either a) not bosons (as theorized) and introduce some new fundamental particle or b) don't exist, and gravity is a different kind of force and has no waves.
I think that because every other force we know can only propagate through wave-particles, we assume the same for gravity (we also assume it's quantized but that's a different topic). If gravitons travel at the speed of light or less, then one would expect them to experience the same gravitational effects. That's the odd part I guess, why should they feel gravity if they're the source of the effect...I'm not really sure at this point but an object has a gravitational field and gravitons still have to pass through it.
If light can't escape a black hole, why should gravitons?
I thought about this and came up with 5 or 6 half-assed answers to the question but they all have flaws at some point. I think the only explanation is that gravitons are either a) not bosons (as theorized) and introduce some new fundamental particle or b) don't exist, and gravity is a different kind of force and has no waves.