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Space-time Invaria nce and Quantum Gr avity Madness By Dr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College Planetarium
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Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 2: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Space-time Invariance and Gravity: only c and GGeneral Relativity 1915, continuous Real Numbers

Dr. Harold Alden Williams, Montgomery College Planetarium at the Takoma Park/Silver Spring Campus

Page 3: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity: or How c, G, and h create the fabric of time-space (reality)!Dr. Harold Alden Williams, Montgomery College Planetarium at the Takoma Park/Silver Spring Campus

Page 6: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Special Relativity

• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_relativity • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_relativity_for_beginners • “Nothing but Relativity” by Palash B. Pal shows that only Galilean

and Einstein Relativity are even possible with the “Principle of Relativity”

• “Principle of Relativity” ≡ “Physical laws appear the same to any inertial observer.”

Page 7: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Speed of light, fastest speed

• c=by definition=299795458 (exact) metes/second

• There is a fastest speed because we leave in a causal universe.

• (if the principle of sufficient cause” is valid)

Page 8: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

There is a Fastest Speed• What ever that fastest speed is nothing can move

faster than fastest. c is the fastest speed. Experimentally this, c, is the speed of light, electromagnetic radiation, in a vacuum.

1 21 2 2

1 21

v vv v

v v c

v is the speed, this formula actually is only correct when v1 and v2 are in the same direction collinear, velocity addition formulae.

Page 9: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

A Paradox of Non-Relativistic Thinking

• If speed of light were not absolute, you would see the car coming toward you reach the collision point before the car it struck

• No paradox if light speed is same for everyone

Page 12: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Test Relativity for Yourself

• If speed of light were not absolute, binary stars would not look like two distinct points of light

• You can verify relativity by simply looking through a telescope at a binary star system

Page 13: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Correct velocity addition formulae for non-colinear velocities

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Addition_of_Velocities_Formula

Page 14: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Newton’s Universal Law of Gravity

F12 is the force on object 2 due to object 1.

G is the gravitational constant. m1 and m2 are respectively the masses of objects 1 and 2. r21 = |r2 − r1| is the distance between objects 2 and 1.

is the unit vector from object 1 to 2.

Page 15: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

G, Newtonian constant of gravitation

G=6.673(10) × 10-11 m3 kg-1 s-2 measured in SI units.G=4π2 AU3/(yr2 M)

Page 16: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Max Planck the man

Page 17: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Max Planck 1918

Page 18: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Max Planck latter

Page 19: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

History of Planck length, time, and mass

In 1899 a year before he formulated blackbody radiation in December of 1900 in Prussian Academy of Sciences, Max Planck: 'Über irreversible Strahlungsvorgänge'. Sitzungsberichte der Preußischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, vol. 5, p. 440-479-480 (1899). Just used dimensional analysis.

Page 20: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

(Gh/(2πc5))1/2 =√Għ/c5=tP =5.3905x10-

44seconds the Planck time, a chronon, smallest time, quanta of time, when!

Time is quantitized at this level, so called “third quantitization.”

(Gh/(2πc3))1/2=√Għ/c3=lP =1.6160x10-

35meters the Planck length, an extention, smallest length, quanta of distance, where!

Space is quantitized at this level, so called “third quantitization.”

Page 21: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

(ch/(2πG))1/2 =√cħ/G=MP =2.1761x10-

8kilograms=21µ grams the Planck mass, the minimum mass of a clock capable of

measuring time. The value of this mass is comparable to the mass of a flea egg. Pages

62-81 in Eugene P. Wigner’s book Symmetries and Reflections Scientific Essays Chapter 5,

Relativistic Invariance and Quantum Phenomena in the section titled “Quantum

Limitations of the Concepts of General Relativity.”

Page 22: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity, a

theory of Gravity

Page 23: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Spherically Symmetric Vacuum Solution to General Relativity

• Invariant ds2 in spherical coordinates

Page 24: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Black Hole Radius, Schwartzshield Radius

2

2s

GMR

c

Rs Schwartzshield Radius

G Newtonian Gravitational Constant

M Mass causing curvature

c speed of light

Page 25: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Einstein’s Energy Mass relationship

2 2/E Mc M E c

E is the energy, M is the mass, and c the speed of light

Page 26: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Speed = frequency wavelength tautology

or /c f f c c f

λ is the wavelength

f is the frequency

c is the wave speed, speed of light in a vacuum here.

Page 27: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Planck’s Law

E hf E hc h is Planck’s constant, energy time

Quantum Mechanics

Page 28: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

h, Planck constant

• h=6.62606876(52)×10-34 J s (measured)• J=Joules = kg m2 s-2 (Energy SI unit)• ħ=h/(2π)=1.054571596(82)×10-34 J s some

times called the Dirac’s Constant or the reduce Planck’s Constant

Page 29: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Substituting things and solving for the wavelength

2 2

2 2

2 / 2 /s s

GE c G hc cR R

c c

1/ 22

3 3

2 2Gh Gh

c c

Page 30: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Substituting things and solving for the frequency

2 2

2 2

2 / 2 // s

GE c Ghf cc f R

c c

1/ 25 52

2 2

c cf f

Gh Gh

1/ 2

5

21/ 1/

Ghf T T f

c

T is the period of oscillation

Page 31: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Now we can actually derive the Planck time, length, and mass

Page 32: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

The Universe we live in

• Had a beginning!• Is expanding,

getting larger with time.

• Is accelerating now, the rate of expansion is increasing, too.

Page 33: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

46x109 light-years radius of the universe, so an estimate of the current information content, pixels, of the universe, since creation could be made. So here it is the current estimate of the information content of the universe, which is an always increasing number, because time is advancing; we get older and not younger; it’s a one way trip; no time travel allowed (you can not kill your mother before you were conceived); and the observable universe is expanding and accelerating since the creation event: 13.7x109 years/tP*4π/3*(46x109 light-years/lP)3 =6.6x10245.

Page 34: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Some modest Conclusions• No infinity in ticks or tocks yet or ever!• No infinitesimals!• Expansion drives order in our cosmos!• Just because we can imagine it does not

make it real or realizable!• Enjoy uncertainty and the increasing

container that you are in!• We no longer have to fear the irrational

numbers like the Pythagoreans, since they are not part of physics!

Page 37: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

(hc5/(2πG))1/2=eP=MP c2=1.95x109 joules the Planck Energy

eP=1.28x(1028 eV or 1019GeV or 1016TeVe0=0.467 tons of TNT

Page 38: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Possible Madness

• http://www.digitalphilosophy.org/ • Edward Fredkin

Page 39: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

End

Sort of

Page 40: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Hubble Parameter

• H0 ≈ 70 km/sec 1/Mpc =2.3x10-18 sec-1

• H0 ≈1/4.4x1017sec=1/13.9x109years

• 1/ H0 is the age of the universe (somewhat model dependent)

• H0 ≈10-33eV

Page 41: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Cosmological Relativitythe Special and General Theories for the Structure of the Universe

by Moshe Carmeli (the man)• ds2=dx2+dy2+dz2-c2dt2-τ2dυ2

• x, y, z usual meaning lengths in space• c, maximum speed in the universe, speed of

light in a vacuum• t, time, what good clocks keep• τ, age of the universe=1/ H0

• υ, recessional velocity (of the galaxy)

Page 42: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Relativity: Modern Large-Scale Spacetime Structure of the Cosmos• Moshe Carmeli editor• Probably his last book• Finished by John Hartnett• Preface finished by Moshe Carmeli• Also in this text Gianluca Gemelli• 5-dimensional special relativistic hydrodyna

mics and cosmology by Gianluca Gemelli

Page 43: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

Planck Mass, MP,

relative to some other masses

• MP=2.1761x10-8kilograms=21µ grams

• me = 9.10938188(72) × 10-31 kg electron mass

• Σ i=1 to 3 Δmνi = 0.7eV= 1.2 × 10-36 kg neutrino masses reference

Page 44: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

World lines, sheets, and volumesof particles, strings, and branes

• We know we live in a universe with at least 3 space dimensions that we have some freedom in.

• Maybe more elaborate structures exist, but we do not as yet perceive them.

Page 45: Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Space-time Invariance and Quantum Gravity Madness By Dr. Harold WilliamsDr. Harold Williams of Montgomery College.

End for now!