Thunderfoot
Hero
tarchon said:Galilean relativity was pretty well known by the mid-20th century.
True - but largely ignored (Why I have no clue...)
tarchon said:Galilean relativity was pretty well known by the mid-20th century.
Gidien said:<SNIP>
Something flying at mach 4 is not lighter than something flying at mach 2... in fact, it has slightly (very, very slightly) more mass and more weight. Now, if said jet has used up a lot of fuel to get to mach 4 obviously it will have less mass, and if it is higher up gravity will have a smaller effect, though that will not affect the mass of the jet.
<SNIP>QUOTE]
Actually - there have been tests on the SR71 done with equivilant fuel loads at both speeds - other than that I can agree with most of your post. I'm just Trolling along to bring up conjecture - as any good scientist will tell you - if it weren't for the nay sayers - I wouldn't have cared.![]()
Clarke's first law: When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong.Ankh-Morpork Guard said:I've got nothing against science, at all. Its just when people start saying things that aren't possible when we really have such a limited scope on what IS and ISN'T possible that gets me. Again, the universe is a big place.![]()
Umbran said:If we're going to be picky - that's the popular hypothesis, but it isn't the only one. It isn't as if our universe isn't already full of constants for which we don't have an origin. Maybe the constant "just is". Einstein first proposed the constant as "it just is", without knowing where it might come from, like the charge on an electron.
fuindordm said:But considering that 10 years ago, cosmologists didn't even know how much matter there was in the universe, I consider the progress pretty good and the future bright.
That seems a bit early to say isn't it. I have seen the plot of the red shift of high Z supernova and it seems like it does certainly favor some kind of acceleration but I would like to see those error bars ccme down before I would make such a statement. (Although I am a relativist not a cosmologist so if I am missing something tell me)fuindordm said:Speaking as a researcher in cosmology... it's pretty clear that the 'dark energy' component has a negative energy density; the astronomical observations that support the acceleration of the cosmic expansion also place limits on the equation of state of this component.
fuindordm said:Speaking as a researcher in cosmology... it's pretty clear that the 'dark energy' component has a negative energy density; the astronomical observations that support the acceleration of the cosmic expansion also place limits on the equation of state of this component.
Umbran said:My work is more in mathematical and simulations, but I'm reasonably familiar with the cosmology.
For a few of the cosmological models, you have math that gets the right results, and then comes the question of interpretation - and depending how you manipulate it, you can interpret it as negative energy density, or as a cosmological constant that "just is".
Ankh-Morpork Guard said:Just give it a few years and the stars will be right...then things will change!![]()
fuindordm said:Both also have "negative energy density" in the sense that they provoke an expansion of space rather than the usual contraction, but you're right that if it turns out to be simply a cosmological constant there's probably little we can do with that.
On a final note, however, the cosmological constant isn't really constant; its value evolves along with the universe.