Distortion of Time?

rbpeake
rbpeake
Joined: 18 Jan 05
Posts: 266
Credit: 979173097
RAC: 649240
Topic 188173

I am guessing that a gravity wave distortion of space also distorts time, such that to an outside observer if space is expanded time slows, and vice versa, if space is compressed time accelerates. This is because the speed of light remains constant.

Is this correct? Neat stuff! :)

debugas
debugas
Joined: 11 Nov 04
Posts: 170
Credit: 77331
RAC: 0

Distortion of Time?

gravitational waves propogate in space-time so yes it distorts both space and time
> to an outside observer if space is expanded time slows, and vice versa,
no no, not exactly, to say true i am not sure what real effect GW has, but try to imagine Minkowsky pseudo-eucledian 4-D plane - it is a "flat" plane on which we can project real curved space-time and see how projections of the curved 4-d space-time's intervals look on that Minkowsky plane. Just have in mind that distanse ds in Minkowsky plane is measured as (ds)^2=(dx)^2+(dy)^2+(dz)^2-(dt)^2
it means for example that the line (0,0,0,0)-(0,0,0,1) is longer than the line (0,0,0,0)-(1/2,0,0,1)

Iron Sun 254
Iron Sun 254
Joined: 25 Feb 05
Posts: 38
Credit: 55455
RAC: 0

> gravitational waves

Message 6500 in response to message 6499

> gravitational waves propogate in space-time so yes it distorts both space and
> time
> > to an outside observer if space is expanded time slows, and vice versa,
> no no, not exactly, to say true i am not sure what real effect GW has, but try
> to imagine Minkowsky pseudo-eucledian 4-D plane - it is a "flat" plane on
> which we can project real curved space-time and see how projections of the
> curved 4-d space-time's intervals look on that Minkowsky plane. Just have in
> mind that distanse ds in Minkowsky plane is measured as
> (ds)^2=(dx)^2+(dy)^2+(dz)^2-(dt)^2
> it means for example that the line (0,0,0,0)-(0,0,0,1) is longer than the line
> (0,0,0,0)-(1/2,0,0,1)
>

Wasn't that the answer on "Final Jeopardy" last night?

------------------------------------
There's a thin line between Genius and Insanity. That's where I live, baby!

THE SPACEPORT - The Other Side of Space

Nereid
Nereid
Joined: 9 Feb 05
Posts: 79
Credit: 925034
RAC: 0

Not on this planet! :-) > >

Message 6501 in response to message 6500

Not on this planet! :-)
> > gravitational waves propogate in space-time so yes it distorts both space
> and
> > time
> > > to an outside observer if space is expanded time slows, and vice
> versa,
> > no no, not exactly, to say true i am not sure what real effect GW has,
> but try
> > to imagine Minkowsky pseudo-eucledian 4-D plane - it is a "flat" plane
> on
> > which we can project real curved space-time and see how projections of
> the
> > curved 4-d space-time's intervals look on that Minkowsky plane. Just have
> in
> > mind that distanse ds in Minkowsky plane is measured as
> > (ds)^2=(dx)^2+(dy)^2+(dz)^2-(dt)^2
> > it means for example that the line (0,0,0,0)-(0,0,0,1) is longer than the
> line
> > (0,0,0,0)-(1/2,0,0,1)
> >
>
> Wasn't that the answer on "Final Jeopardy" last night?
>

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.