This is kind of a tangent from the "artifical gravity" thread.
I was reading this part of Chuck's post:
when I realized that not everyone is using the same definition for gravity.
Correct me if I'm wrong, please.
From what I've read, Chuck is right. Gravity is not really a direct expression of some wave or particle, like sound and light are. Instead, it's a physical attribute of space-time... a warping. I can't imagine 3 dimensions being warped, and I don't think anyone can, but it can be understood if you warp a 2-d piece of paper.
We know this for a few reasons. For example, according to relativity, nothing can exceed c. However, experiments have shown that the effect of gravity are instantaneous. If you could somehow introduce a large body of mass somewhere light years away, the second it was created we would all feel its gravitational effects (though they would be slight). Light, on the other hand, would not reach us from this body for years. Hence, gravity must be an attribute of space-time.
So far, we don't know how to communicate faster than that magic number, c. However, if gravity is instantaneous, wouldn't it be possible to send messages with gravity if we could somehow control it?
We would need that artificial gravity generator, of course. Then, we setup some sort of detector in space light years away, which would be very sensitive to gravity. We then pulse the generator, like morse code, and the detector picks up the specially timed pulses and reassembles the code.
How does that idea sound?
I also read something about crystalline resonance making it possible to communicate instantaneously, but I have no idea what that theory is about.
I was reading this part of Chuck's post:
Originally posted by: Woodchuck2000
Gravity is not energy. It is a warping of spacetime related to the mass of a body.
when I realized that not everyone is using the same definition for gravity.
Correct me if I'm wrong, please.
From what I've read, Chuck is right. Gravity is not really a direct expression of some wave or particle, like sound and light are. Instead, it's a physical attribute of space-time... a warping. I can't imagine 3 dimensions being warped, and I don't think anyone can, but it can be understood if you warp a 2-d piece of paper.
We know this for a few reasons. For example, according to relativity, nothing can exceed c. However, experiments have shown that the effect of gravity are instantaneous. If you could somehow introduce a large body of mass somewhere light years away, the second it was created we would all feel its gravitational effects (though they would be slight). Light, on the other hand, would not reach us from this body for years. Hence, gravity must be an attribute of space-time.
So far, we don't know how to communicate faster than that magic number, c. However, if gravity is instantaneous, wouldn't it be possible to send messages with gravity if we could somehow control it?
We would need that artificial gravity generator, of course. Then, we setup some sort of detector in space light years away, which would be very sensitive to gravity. We then pulse the generator, like morse code, and the detector picks up the specially timed pulses and reassembles the code.
How does that idea sound?
I also read something about crystalline resonance making it possible to communicate instantaneously, but I have no idea what that theory is about.