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Building a Dark Energy Detector?
Posted on Wednesday, April 04, 2007 @ 22:46:21 UTC by vlad
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Dr. Jack Sarfatti writes: >>From Ray Kurzweil's Newsletter:
Here is some physics news
about building a dark energy detector.
Your friend
always,
Richard
Superconductors inspire quantum test for dark
energy
NewScientist.com news service, April 3, 2007
Quantum
mechanics says that the vacuum of space is seething with virtual photons
that are popping in and out of existence. Physicists suggest that
when these virtual photons have a frequency below around 2 terahertz, they are
able to interact gravitationally, contributing to dark energy.
Note that when there is a relative
covariant acceleration between a detector and zero point oscillations, the
detector will "click" so that it's not always true that QED cannot directly
detect virtual off shell quanta. This is essentially the Unruh Effect.
A global Minkowski vacuum looks like a thermal blackbody medium to
non-geodesic Rindler observers seeing the local mixed state density matrix of
entangled virtual photons in spacelike separated Rindler wedges. This is a
particle horizon effect similar to what happens in deSitter space for dark
energy. The "wedges" are the past and future horizons that Hawking radiate just
like the surface (event horizon where the Killing vector field for t -> t' =
t + T is null. Its timelike for r > rs and spacelike for r > rs).
Suppose the virtual ZPF (photons in this case) are confined in a cavity and
the detector is inside the cavity. If both detector and cavity are on geodesics
no click if the geodesic deviation is small enough. Consider the other
possibilities. Also there are issues of complementarity between reliability and
localization. The more you localize the response of a detector the less reliable
it is and you get dark false positives even in vacuum. See Asher Peres's last
paper in RMP 2004 I think on quantum, information and relativity. Peres's theory
is diametrically opposed to Bohm's ontological interpretation of course. Peres
refutes Susskind implicitly saying that the issue of information loss down a
black hole is not well-formulated - misuse of unitarity. See end of his paper. I
will go into this in more detail anon.
Also to correct one of Zielinski's confusions, the Rindler wedge spacetime
is not the GR version of a uniform homogeneous constant Newtonian gravity field.
True the test particle in hyperbolic motion has a constant non-geodesic
covariant 4-acceleration g along its world line, but different world lines have
generally different g's because in 1 + 1 to make it easier formally
t^2 - x^2 = 1/g^2
i.e.
t^2 - (x/c)^2 = c^2/g^2
Note c^2/g^2 dimensionally is
(L^2/T^2)/(L^2/T^4) = T^2
Therefore, fixing a number for g is the locus of a hyperbolic worldline in
global Minkowski space-time. The corresponding neighboring world lines will have
different numerical values of g.
Physicist Paul Warburton at University College London is building such a dark
energy detector and could have results
next year. Read Original Article>>
Go to http://space.newscientist.com/article/dn11523-superconductors-inspire-quantum-test-for-dark-energy.html
Superconductors inspire quantum test for dark energy
- 10:05 03 April 2007
- Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe
and get 4 free issues.
- Zeeya Merali, London
Dark energy is so befuddling that it's causing some physicists to do their
science backwards.
"Usually you propose your theory and then work out an experiment to test it,"
says Christian Beck of Queen Mary, University of London. A few years ago,
however, he and his colleague Michael Mackey of McGill University in Montreal,
Canada, proposed a table-top experiment to detect the elusive form of energy,
without quite knowing why it might work. Now the pair have come up with the
theory behind the experiment. "It is certainly an upside-down way of doing
things," Beck admits.
Dark energy is the mysterious force that many physicists think is causing the
expansion of the universe to accelerate. In 2004, Beck and Mackey claimed that
the quantum fluctuations of empty space could be the source of dark energy and
suggested a test for this idea.
This is not so. They
were not the first. That is an old idea that dark energy is positive ZPF with w
= -1 negative pressure (repulsive antigravity). It's already in both my books in
2002 and it was not original with me. That dark matter is also negative ZPF of
positive pressure w = - 1 that asymptotically mimics w = 0 CDM (attractive
gravity) was my idea.
This involved measuring the varying current induced by quantum fluctuations
in a device called a Josephson junction – a very thin insulator sandwiched
between two superconducting layers.
Beck reasoned that if quantum fluctuations and dark energy are related, the
current in the Josephson junction would die off beyond a certain frequency (see
A
table-top test for dark energy?). But they hadn't worked out what
exactly caused the cut-off.
Now the duo say they know, and last week Beck presented the theory at a
conference on unsolved problems for the standard model of cosmology held at
Imperial College London.
Frequency cut-off
Quantum mechanics says that the vacuum of space is seething with virtual
photons that are popping in and out of existence. Beck and Mackey suggest that
when these virtual photons have a frequency below a certain threshold, they are
able to interact gravitationally, contributing to dark energy.
Their theory is inspired by superconducting materials. "Below a critical
temperature, electrons in the material act in a fundamentally different way, and
it starts superconducting," says Beck. "So why shouldn't virtual photons also
change character below a certain frequency?"
If so, virtual photons should behave differently below a frequency of around
2 terahertz, causing any currents in the Josephson junction to taper off above
this frequency. Physicist Paul Warburton at University College London is
building such a dark energy detector and could have results next
year.
This seems Rube Goldberg ad-hoc.
Meaningless without seeing the math model.
Some evidence that dark energy works like this may already have been found.
In 2006, Martin Tajmar at the Austrian Research Centers facility in Seibersdorf
and his colleagues noticed bizarre behaviour in a spinning niobium ring. At room
temperature, niobium does not superconduct, and accelerometers around the ring
measured that it was spinning at a constant rate. But once the temperature fell,
the niobium started to superconduct, and the accelerometers suddenly picked up a
signal (Gravity's
secret).
An ODLRO coherent condensate effect
like Modanese's?
Odd acceleration
"We measured an acceleration even though the ring's motion hadn't changed at
all," says Clovis de Matos, who works at the European Space Agency in Paris and
established the theory behind the experiment. He thinks the results could be
explained if gravity got a boost inside the superconductor. "Beck and Mackey's
gravitationally activated photon would have that effect," he says.
The controversial experiment seemed to fall foul of Einstein's equivalence
principle, which states that all objects should accelerate under gravity at the
same rate. It implied that "if you have two elevators, one made of normal matter
and one made of superconducting matter, and accelerate them by the same amount,
objects inside will feel different accelerations", de Matos says. Astronomers
may have seen a similar violation of the principle (see "Two-speed gravity",
below).
The odd acceleration detected in the niobium ring also suggests that energy
isn't conserved in the superconductor – another major violation of known
physics. Dark energy could solve that problem, however. "We did the sums and
found out that energy wasn't conserved, but perhaps that was just because we
were missing dark energy," de Matos says.
Paul Frampton, a cosmologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, thinks Beck and Mackey's reasoning is flawed. "I don't think for a second
they'll measure dark energy, but they should certainly try."
Cosmology - Keep up with the latest ideas in our special
report.
From issue 2591 of New Scientist magazine, 03
April 2007, page 28-33
Two-speed gravity
"If Galileo could have dropped a lump of dark matter and a lump of normal
matter from the top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa, he might have expected them to
fall at the same rate," says Orfeu Bertolami at the Instituto Superior Técnico
in Lisbon, Portugal. "But he would have been wrong."
Bertolami and his colleagues studied a galaxy cluster known as Abell cluster
A586 to see if dark matter and normal matter fall in the same way under gravity.
He says this cluster is ideal because it is spherical, suggesting that it has
settled down: "The only motion we are seeing now is due to gravity toward the
cluster's centre."
The team studied 25 galaxies in the cluster using gravitational lensing – the
shift in the apparent position of a light source caused by gravity bending the
light. When they analysed the positions of galaxies using conventional models,
things just didn't add up. "It only makes sense if the normal matter is falling
faster than the dark matter," Bertolami says.
This is the first astronomical observation to suggest that Einstein's
principle of equivalence is violated, says Bertolami (read a preprint of the
article). "If dark energy interacts with dark matter in some way, it could
be affecting its motion."
Jack Sarfatti
"If we knew
what it was we were doing, it would not be called research, would
it?"
- Albert
Einstein
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3.2 billion-year-old surprise: Earth had strong magnetic field (Score: 1) by vlad on Wednesday, April 04, 2007 @ 23:10:30 UTC (User Info | Send a Message) http://www.zpenergy.com | Geophysicists at the University of Rochester announce in today’s issue of Nature that the Earth’s magnetic field was nearly as strong 3.2 billion years ago as it is today.
The findings, which are contrary to previous studies, suggest that even
in its earliest stages the Earth was already well protected from the
solar wind, which can strip away a planet’s atmosphere and bathe its
surface in lethal radiation.
“The intensity of the ancient magnetic field was very similar to
today’s intensity,” says John Tarduno, professor of geophysics in the
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of
Rochester. “These values suggest the field was surprisingly strong and
robust. It’s interesting because it could mean the Earth already had a
solid iron inner core 3.2 billion years ago, which is at the very limit
of what theoretical models of the Earth’s formation could predict.”
Full Story: http://www.physorg.com/news94911308.html [www.physorg.com]
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Re: Building a Dark Energy Detector? (Score: 1) by Henry on Friday, April 13, 2007 @ 21:30:24 UTC (User Info | Send a Message) | I lol at this article
I didn't read much of it, but I saw this and stopped reading.
t^2 - x^2 = 1/g^2
i.e.
t^2 - (x/c)^2 = c^2/g^2
I hate to say................ but someone didnt pass basic algebra |
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