Hi Juan

Due to the lack of space, I will split my reply in two parts. This is part 1.

Thanks for your comments. Certainly, the PSR and the aether are not mainstream so far, but I am optimistic that they will be in the following years to come because it is one of the most viable solutions to contemporary physics.

You said: I even feel people who support the relativistic - based on GR- "block universe" tend to assume something quite "absolute" as PSR.

I agree, some observations suggest the PSR. The essay of Daryl Janzen is one of this cases.

You: Relativism is the concept that points of view have no absolute truth or validity, having only relative, subjective value according to differences in perception and consideration"

Many people think that considering the PSR means abandoning relativism. This is a misconception. The PSR can go along with the principle of relativity.

You: But I have no faith in PSR...

I understand that many people do not believe in the PSR, some times it is matter of taste, but as I argue in my essay the PSR could be helpful to solve many of the present problems in physics. This is why it is important.

To be continued...

Israel

This is part 2.

You: how do you think PSR would help to explain the accelerated expansion of the universe?

To answer your question we first need to understand how physicists arrived at the conclusion that space is expanding. For this purpose we have to go back to the beginning of the XX century before the discovery of the general relativity around 1915. By then the special relativity (SR) had been already developed. Astronomers thought that the Copernican principle was valid, this principle estates that the earth is not the center of the universe. They were also learning how to determine the distance of distant astronomical objects such as galaxies. But their methods were base under the assumption that the inverse square law for the intensity of light held. This was learned in previous centuries and is true as long as one thinks that light needs no medium, that is, that light propagates in EMPTY space or vacuum. The consideration that space was empty and infinite in extension led thinkers to arrived at the famous Olbers' paradox which says that the night should be as brilliant as the day because in every direction of the sky one will find a star. Astronomer and physicists were in real trouble and they did know how to solve this puzzle. Now, from the SR they knew that when a light source moves relative to an observer, he will experience the Doppler effect. If the light source approaches the observer the emission spectra will be blushifted, on the contrary, if the source recedes from the observer the spectra will be redshifted. By characterization of stars they learned how to estimate the distances of the objects by several methods, cepheid variables, etc. As well by applying SR they interpret the redshift found in spectra as a recessional velocity. Thus, if one constructs a plot of redshift vs distance one would obtain what by 1929 was known as the Hubble's law. This relationship of distance-velocity suggests two ideas if we based only their interpretation on SR, that is: galaxies are moving away from our own galaxy and that the farther the galaxy the greater the velocity. The Copernican principle can be used to support this hypothesis. So the expansion of the universe was one way to solve in part the Olber's paradox. In 1917 Einstein published a paper were he had added the cosmological constant LAMBDA to avoid the collapse or expansion of the universe due to gravity. In this model the universe was static. However, by 1922 a couple of models suggesting expansion were put forwarded. One of this was due to Alexander Friedmann. He showed that Einstein's Universe was a special case of the more general solutions, in which the universe is expanding. In 1927 George Lemaitre found a similar solution to that of Friedmann. By 1929 Hubble published his famous law (it was Vesto slipher and others who first discovered Hubble's law before 1929). Now we have data suggesting expansion and we have a theoretical framework where data can be given a physical interpretation. The rest is the history that we all know: big bang, cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR), acceleration of the expansion, horizon problem, etc.

Now let use imagine that we change a little bit the history of physics and keep in mind that the aether as the medium of electromagnetic waves was never rejected. Then, we will easily realized that, as any other medium, the aether is dissipative. This means that at the cosmic scale the inverse square law is not valid at all. This would imply that the determination of the distances and velocities of galaxies and stars by means of the measurement of brightness and the redshifts are in need of corrections. The fact that the aether is dissipative also explains why distant astronomical objects cannot be "seen" with "poor" optics. Since the aether is the bearer of electromagnetic waves, the energy of light emitted from distant galaxies is simply absorbed by the medium. As the distance increases the wave vanishes. This explains, at once, the Olber's paradox without need of assuming the expansion of the universe. Since there is no expansion, there is no need of Big Bang. And the CMBR can be interpreted only as the temperature of the aether, this also explains the horizon problem. Some other problems can also be solved such as dark matter. If we assume the aether as a material medium, this would immediately explain the rotational problem of stars in galaxies. As I said the theory is already developed, I think it is only a matter of time for the PSR and the aether to reemerge.

I hope I have answered your question.

Israel

Dear Peter

Thank you for reading my essay, I really appreciate your comments. I haven't taken a look at yours but I will do it as soon as possible. I am sure I will have no problems to get your ideas.

You: I derive a third option which is of real and mutually exclusive spaces, which resolves about every anomaly in astronomy, but it seems it can't be published as it is too 'different' to the old paradigm so difficult to rationalise.

I am curious about it. Thanks for your wishes and I wish you the best too, I am confident that your work is also interesting for any reader and deserves a good score.

Israel

Dear Peter

Thank you for reading my essay, I really appreciate your comments. I haven't taken a look at yours but I will do it as soon as possible. I am sure I will have no problems to get your ideas.

You: I derive a third option which is of real and mutually exclusive spaces, which resolves about every anomaly in astronomy, but it seems it can't be published as it is too 'different' to the old paradigm so difficult to rationalise.

I am curious about it. Thanks for your wishes and I wish you the best too, I am confident that your work is also interesting for any reader and deserves a good score.

Israel

Israel :

Thanks for the answer. And don't worry : yes you did answer.

Now: I think you don't need luck with your essay in the contest, you are in the way of getting a good score here anyway as far as I can see.

But I wish you luck..

Regards

Juan Ramos

P.d. Aun que he expresado que no soy un creyente del aether,

No puedo negar que sirve para explicar muchas cosas. Si tienes interés en que nos contactemos fuera del contexto de este concurso este es mi correo: juanr@syc.com.mx

Thanks Israel, my work is mostly qualitative as you see, stemming as it is from my geometrical approach to physics. Good luck to you too.

Vladimir

Dear Juan

Thanks for your wishes and for the invitation, I will keep it in mind.

Good luck in the contest

Israel

  • [deleted]

Dear Israel

I am also supporter of opinion that gravity is not a fundamental force. It seems to me that Sakharov's view about elasticity of space close to truth.

See detail my article "What Wolfgang Pauli Did Mean?"

http://vixra.org/abs/0907.0022

    16 days later
    • [deleted]

    Hello Israel Perez,

    Thank you for your most interesting essay. You will find the following proposition relevant to the theme you expound in your essay: "If the speed of light is constant, then light propagates as a wave". You can find the proof to this in End Note II) of my essay, "The Metaphysics of Physics". This establishes that the CSL Postulate contradicts the Photon Hypothesis. And it unequivocally shows light is a wave. And as a wave, certainly the speed of its propagation through a medium will be innate and independent of the source or the observer.

    I have made reference to your essay in mine. You may wish to check this out!

    Best wishes!

      Dear Constantinos,

      Thank you for reading my essays and for your comments. I do agree that the speed of light is defined, as in any other wave, by the properties of the medium. So if light is envisaged as a wave its speed is determined by the medium. If the medium is isotropic and homogeneous then one would expect the speed to be constant relative to an observer at rest in this medium. The problem arises when there is an observer moving in relation to the medium and the question do not appear to be as simple as in the previous case. Here the Lorentz contraction and the time dilation play their role in making the speed of light (the laws of physics invariant) a constant for all observes. The notion of photon per se does not require a medium but it is not clear what physical entity defines its speed. Actually, it is simply argue that its speed is constant and the same. If one considers relativistic effects then an observer in motion will measure the same value in any inertial system. So, for practical purposes, what matters is not whether light is a wave or a photon. However, if one wishes to be conceptually coherent and consistent, as you also point it out, the notion of photon leads to intuitive contradictions whereas waves do not.

      I will take a look at your essay as soon as I can. Gook luck in the contest!

      Israel

      Dear Israel Perez,

      You write, "The problem arises when there is an observer moving in relation to the medium and the question do not appear to be as simple as in the previous case."

      There can be no doubt light propagates as a wave. And as such, light will have an absolute and innate propagation speed in a medium. And that constant speed is what we measure 'locally' to the medium of propagation.

      So the only question really is can we measure the speed of light in any other way but 'locally'?

      Constantinos

      Dear Israel,

      I came across this definition of "hume" in the Philosophical Lexicon (www.philosophicallexicon.com) and I thought of your essay. You could have named your essay, "The Preferred System of Reference Exhumed":

      hume, pron. (1) Indefinite personal and relative pronoun, presupposing no referent. Useful esp. in writing solipsistic treatises, sc. "to hume it may concern." v. (2) To commit to the flames, bury, or otherwise destroy a philosophical position, as in "That theory was humed in the 1920s." Hence, exhume, v. to revive a position generally believed to humed.

      Best, Daryl

        Dear Israel,

        You have argued for a preferred reference system in your essay, and I have argued for the relational view of motion (and extensions of it) in my essay Absolute or Relative Motion...or Something Else? , which are completely opposite views. I think we may have a very exciting discussion.

        First, I will adress your question: i) Does the fact that the PSR cannot be experimentally detected mean that the PSR

        does not exist?

        As you have noticed in your essay, the introduction of any concept can be justified if it leads to useful empirical confirmations (that may have nothing to do with the concept in question). So we may say that there is a preferred system of reference (even tough it cannot be observed) in order to obtain a completely new theory with possible new experiments and empirical success, but it seems that such a theory will always have one drawback: it will produce statements that can never be verified.

        For instance, what is my absolute position? This is a meaningful and unanswerable question in the PSR framework. It happens to be unanswerable because of the coincidence that no experiment can answer this question due to the particular form that the laws of physics happen to have. So any theory that does not need the invisible structure of absolute space and still produce the same results is superior. The introduction of the PSR need some extremely compelling arguments.

        So now I turn to your arguments in that support the PSR hypothesis. You have written that

        ''Suppose that before the discovery of RT, particle accelerators had been already developed. And assume that the ALICE, ATLAS and CMS collaborations at the large

        hadron collider had released the news, well know today, that the quantum vacuum is actually a perfect fluid [\LHC experiments brought new insight into the primordial universe" (21; 22)]. If this fluid were assumed to be at rest and

        not signi cantly aff ected by the presence of material particles it would immediately be identi ed as the aether or AS.''

        That it not strictly true. Newton introduced absolute space in order to define motion. Suppose you have a snapshot showing physical objects in euclidean space. Now suppose after some time has elapsed, you take another snapshot. How can we know if any change has happened? It is necessary to have an equilocality relation: a relation that tell which point in one snapshot is the same in the other snapshot. The equilocality relation is necessary to make motion of objects in time a meaningful concept, and Newton´s absolute space does exactly that, and that was the reason why it was introduced (see Barbour´s book The discovery of dynamics).

        The presence of a quantum vacuum field does not entail that there is a PSR, or that AS could be identified with it. The reason follows from the same argument above: suppose you have two snapshots of field configurations defined on a 3D euclidean space taken at different times. How can we tell what´s the difference between them without a way of identifying a point in one snapshot with a point in another?

        You have also written

        ''And fourthly, it is also well understood that the paradoxes in special RT such as the clock paradox,

        the Supplee paradox, etc. arise due to the lack of the PRS. For if one assumes that the PRS exists all paradoxes as

        well as the intuitive perplexities inherent to the theory automatically vanish.''

        What is the scientific value of the lack or presence of intuitive perplexities? The clock and Supplee paradox are not actual paradoxes: they are fully resolved and explained by special relativity without any problem. Why bother with them?

        Another idea of yours is

        ''[...] keep space immovable a la Newton and assume it as a non-homogenous material fluid with di fferent refraction indices that vary

        as function of the distance between the observer and the source of GF. The gradient of the refraction indices is caused by the GF and will automatically make the speed of light to have di erent values as function of its position within the GF. So, within this context, the warping of space can be physically reinterpreted as the change in the density of

        the material medium (23).''

        How can this framework explain how the time measurement differences of clocks situated on different points of space close to a massive objects (such as the earth)? This effect is considered everyday for GPS devices to work.

        I´ll be waiting for your answers and invite you to read my essay and share opinions about a different view on time, space and motion.

        Best regards.

          Hi Constantinos

          I agree with you, though I don't have a definite answer to your question. Above, perhaps, you will find the arguments that I gave to Pentcho and Eckard very useful, they are related to the speed of light. Please take a look at them.

          Regards

          Israel

          Dear Daniel,

          The implication that we must live in a Block Universe, as realised through the Andromeda paradox, is a significant issue, from the point-of-view of relativity, for any realist to overcome, if they would reject the relativistic possibility of a preferred reference frame.

          As for experimental evidence, local experiments can't decide either way, since the physics is the same with or without a preferred frame; however, beyond the empirical fact that time really does pass, which can't be reconciled with relativity in any realistic sense without a preferred space, all empirical evidence from cosmology decidedly favours---and really can't work in the usual way without assuming---a preferred reference frame.

          I hope you read my essay as well, and I'll read yours, as I'd be interested to join in on this discussion you've proposed. I'd very much appreciate such a well thought out critique of my essay as you've offered Israel here.

          Best, Daryl

          Hi Israel,

          (After reading your essay for a second time I slowly starting to appreciate the gist. Why slowly? The overuse of unusual acronyms means that my brain has to multitask (which I am no longer good at); the first task digesting and appreciating the content and the second learning acronyms that have no relevance beyond the essay. This was now a self criticism regarding my short term memory or lack thereof that all scientific writers should be aware of; 聽I am sure that I am not alone.)

          Nevertheless, congratulations to the extremely well written and structured philosophical disquisition; explaining the historical background that moulded our way of thinking and raising the valid questions and presenting argument that there must be more.

          Your essay and my essay ( 聽 .../topic/1458聽 聽 ) support each other well; I, like you, raise 聽the question of a, yet unknown, underlying absolute reality verses our only ability to model, possibly degraded, a relative reality.

          Regards and good luck - Anton

          PS let's stay in touch my email in my essay.

            Hi Daryl

            Nice hearing from you again. I agree that the "hume" may well describe my essay's discussion, actually, the RELOAD part was the plus.

            Cheers

            Israel

            Hi FQXi readers

            I would like to open a discussion about the red shift.

            My arguments go as follows:

            First let us bear in mind that science must be strictly rigorous and critical. And to make valid the following questions we must make a legitimate assumption. Suppose that at present we have all fields of theoretical physics at our hands with the exception of the general theory of relativity, which we shall concur for the moment that it has not yet been discovered or invented. This set of theories along with its conceptual assumptions will constitute our THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK (TF). Under this TF the nontrivial questions arise in relation to the cosmological redshift: (1) What physical interpretation can be given to the redshift observed in the spectral analysis of emission / absorption of galaxies, stars, etc.? (2) Considering the kinematics of special relativity is it possible to conclude that the redshift is synonymous of recessional velocity? (3) What conceptual framework allows us to associate the red shift with recessional velocity (which leads to the Hubble law)? (4) Are there any other interpretations of the redshift? (5) is it possible to conclude that the universe is expanding? If so, Why?

            I would be glad if anyone could leave some comments. I believe that the answer to these questions are crucial to figure out whether the universe is really expanding or not. The only rule here is simply, not to introduce general relativity.

            Regards

            Israel

              Hi Anton

              Thanks for reading my essay and for your comments. Some other folks have pointed out my overuse of acronyms, I acknowledge this. Next time, I will reduce the number I promise.

              I will take a look at your essay as soon as possible thanks for the invitation.

              Best Regards

              Israel

              • [deleted]

              Israel,

              Was it you who linked me to this article last year?

              I think the whole issue of redshift only being possible due to recession is based on the assumption photons remain point particles during transmission. But why? Wouldn't quanta of light expand, much like a gas when emitted? Then when absorbed, there are various possibilities why this expansion would be causing redshift. The one I suggested in last years contest was simply that beyond a certain luminosity, the loading theory of quantum absorption would mean it would start to take longer for each photon to register.

              As for 5, expansion is already balanced by gravitational attraction, so the space expanding between galaxies, is matched by the space contracting into them, leading to overall flat space.