http://metaresearch.org/cosmology/Quantum_Physics/StructureOfMatter.asp
It may surprise you to learn that the speed of gravity is something of an ongoing debate among many cosmologists today.
The textbook answer to the question “what is the speed of gravity?”
is that it propagates at the speed of light. This answer is derived from
Einstein’s version of relativity, which demands that nothing be able to
propagate faster than the speed of light. Yet there is a large body of
physical evidence that contradicts this theoretical assertion.
In 1998, physicist Tom Van Flandern authored a paper in Physics Letters A that
remains one of the best refutations of Einstein’s version of relativity
ever published. Van Flandern argues that Hendrik Lorentz’s version of
relativity, which incorporates an aether that all matter moves through,
is more correct than Einstein’s version, based on
experimental observations about the speed of gravity. Lorentz and
Einstein’s versions of relativity are actually very similar. The main
difference being that the speed of light is not a limiting factor in
Lorentz’s version of relativity. Van Flandern argues that the speed of
gravity is far faster than the speed of light, just as Newton’s laws
describe it to be. Newton’s laws declare gravity to
propagate instantaneously.
I’m sure by now you may be wondering what kind of proof does Van
Flandern have to offer? Van Flandern starts out by demonstrating that
the visible light arriving from the Sun to Earth comes from a measurably
different location in the sky than the point that the Earth is
accelerating towards in space. This is because light propagates at light
speed, while gravity propagates at infinite speed. The fact that the
Earth is not accelerating toward the visible location of the Sun, but
rather 20 arc seconds in front of the visible Sun (where the Sun will
visibly be 8.3 minutes in the future) is very strong evidence against
gravity propagating at the speed of light. This same light delay effect
is seen in the positions of stars as well.
If gravity propagated between the Sun and the Earth at the same speed
as visible light, the Earth would double the distance from the Sun in
1200 years, which obviously isn’t happening. Many other notable
physicists besides Newton and Lorentz also concluded that
orbital calculations must be made using an infinite speed of
gravity. Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington’s orbital calculations rely on
gravity having an infinite speed, and Pierre-Simon Laplace calculated
gravity to have a speed of at least 10^8 times the speed of light.
Van Flandern goes on to discuss GPS clocks, which are often cited as
being proof positive of Einstein’s relativity. It may surprise you, but
the GPS system doesn’t actually use Einstein’s field equations. In
fact, this paper by
the U.S. Naval Observatory tells us that, while incorporating
Einstein’s equations into the system may slightly improve accuracy, the
system itself doesn’t rely on them at all. To quote the opening line of
the paper, “The Operational Control System (OCS) of the Global
Positioning System (GPS) does not include the rigorous transformations
between coordinate systems that Einstein’s general theory of relativity
would seem to require.”
Van Flandern explains why this is so:
Finally, the Global Positioning System (GPS) showed the remarkable fact that all atomic clocks on board orbiting satellites moving at high speeds in different directions could be simultaneously and continuously synchronized with each other and with all ground clocks. No “relativity of simultaneity” corrections, as required by SR, were needed. This too seemed initially to falsify SR. But on further inspection, continually changing synchronization corrections for each clock exist such that the predictions of SR are fulfilled for any local co-moving frame. To avoid the embarrassment of that complexity, GPS analysis is now done exclusively in the Earth-centered inertial frame (the local gravity field). And the pre-launch adjustment of clock rates to compensate for relativistic effects then hides the fact that all orbiting satellite clocks would be seen to tick slower than ground clocks if not rate-compensated for their orbital motion, and that no reciprocity would exist when satellites view ground clocks.
Van Flandern also discusses the famous Michelson-Morely experiment, the Michelson-Gale experiment, and the Sagnac experiment,
which are often cited as discrediting Lorentz’s version of relativity.
The truth of the matter is that Lorentz’s version of relativity can
easily account for the observations if one simply assumes a local
gravity field with preferred frame for local observers, rather than a
universal gravity field. Further, at the time, the wave nature of matter
has not yet been discovered by Louis de Broglie.
Van Flandern concludes his paper by saying:
Near the end of his career, Lorentz is quoted as having graciously conceded the contest: “My theory can obtain all the same results as special relativity, but perhaps not with a comparable simplicity.” (private communication from C.O. Alley) Today, with hindsight, we might make a somewhat different assessment: “Special relativity can explain all the experimental results in Table II that Lorentzian relativity can, but perhaps not with a comparable simplicity.” Even so, SR cannot explain the faster-than-light propagation of gravity, although LR readily can.
If this article has peaked your interest in alternative cosmology,
please set some time aside to watch Thunderbolts of the Gods. I
guarantee that this video will change your perspective on our universe.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Speed of Gravity What the Experiments Say |
Tom Van Flandern, Meta Research [as published in Physics Letters A 250:1-11 (1998)]
|
Abstract. Standard experimental techniques exist to determine the
propagation speed of forces. When we apply these techniques to gravity, they
all yield propagation speeds too great to measure, substantially faster than
lightspeed. This is because gravity, in contrast to light, has no detectable
aberration or propagation delay for its action, even for cases (such as binary
pulsars) where sources of gravity accelerate significantly during the light
time from source to target. By contrast, the finite propagation speed of light
causes radiation pressure forces to have a non-radial component causing orbits
to decay (the “Poynting-Robertson effect”); but gravity has no counterpart
force proportional to
to
first order. General relativity (GR) explains these features by suggesting that
gravitation (unlike electromagnetic forces) is a pure geometric effect of
curved space-time, not a force of nature that propagates. Gravitational
radiation, which surely does propagate at lightspeed but is a fifth order
effect in
,
is too small to play a role in explaining this difference in behavior between
gravity and ordinary forces of nature. Problems with the causality principle
also exist for GR in this connection, such as explaining how the external
fields between binary black holes manage to continually update without benefit
of communication with the masses hidden behind event horizons. These causality
problems would be solved without any change to the mathematical formalism of
GR, but only to its interpretation, if gravity is once again taken to be a
propagating force of nature in flat space-time with the propagation speed
indicated by observational evidence and experiments: not less than 2x1010
c. Such a change of perspective
requires no change in the assumed character of gravitational radiation or its
lightspeed propagation. Although faster-than-light force propagation speeds do
violate Einstein special relativity (SR), they are in accord with Lorentzian
relativity, which has never been experimentally distinguished from SR—at least,
not in favor of SR. Indeed, far from upsetting much of current physics, the
main changes induced by this new perspective are beneficial to areas where
physics has been struggling, such as explaining experimental evidence for
non-locality in quantum physics, the dark matter issue in cosmology, and the
possible unification of forces. Recognition of a faster-than-lightspeed
propagation of gravity, as indicated by all existing experimental evidence, may
be the key to taking conventional physics to the next plateau.
The
most amazing thing I was taught as a graduate student of celestial mechanics at
Yale in the 1960s was that all gravitational interactions between bodies in all
dynamical systems had to be taken as instantaneous. This seemed unacceptable on
two counts. In the first place, it seemed to be a form of “action at a
distance”. Perhaps no one has so elegantly expressed the objection to such a
concept better than Sir Isaac Newton: “That one body may act upon another at a
distance through a vacuum, without the mediation of any thing else, by and
through which their action and force may be conveyed from one to the other, is
to me so great an absurdity, that I believe no man who has in philosophical
matters a competent faculty of thinking, can ever fall into it.” (See Hoffman,
1983.) But mediation requires propagation, and finite bodies should be
incapable of propagation at infinite speeds since that would require infinite
energy. So instantaneous gravity seemed to have an element of magic to it.
The
second objection was that we had all been taught that Einstein’s special
relativity (SR), an experimentally well-established theory, proved that nothing
could propagate in forward time at a speed greater than that of light in a
vacuum. Indeed, as astronomers we were taught to calculate orbits using
instantaneous forces; then extract the position of some body along its orbit at
a time of interest, and calculate where that position would appear as seen from
Earth by allowing for the finite propagation speed of light from there to here.
It seemed incongruous to allow for the finite speed of light from the body to
the Earth, but to take the effect of Earth’s gravity on that same body as
propagating from here to there instantaneously. Yet that was the required procedure
to get the correct answers.
These
objections were certainly not new when I raised them. They have been raised and
answered thousands of times in dozens of different ways over the years since
general relativity (GR) was set forth in 1916. Even today in discussions of
gravity in USENET newsgroups on the Internet, the most frequently asked
question and debated topic is “What is the speed of gravity?” It is only heard
less often in the classroom because many teachers and most textbooks head off
the question by hastily assuring students that gravitational waves propagate at
the speed of light, leaving the firm impression, whether intended or not, that
the question of gravity’s propagation speed has already been answered.
Indeed,
it is widely accepted, even if less widely known, that the speed of gravity in
Newton’s Universal Law is unconditionally infinite. (E.g., Misner et al., 1973,
p. 177) This is usually not mentioned in proximity to the statement that GR
reduces to Newtonian gravity in the low-velocity, weak-field limit because of
the obvious question it begs about how that can be true if the propagation
speed in one model is the speed of light, and in the other model it is
infinite.
The
same dilemma comes up in many guises: Why do photons from the Sun travel in directions
that are not parallel to the direction of Earth’s gravitational acceleration
toward the Sun? Why do total eclipses of the Sun by the Moon reach maximum
eclipse about 40 seconds before the Sun and Moon’s gravitational forces align?
How do binary pulsars anticipate each other’s future position, velocity, and
acceleration faster than the light time between them would allow? How can black
holes have gravity when nothing can get out because escape speed is greater
than the speed of light?
Herein
we will examine the experimental evidence bearing on the issue of the speed of
propagation of gravity. By gravity, we mean the gravitational “force” from some
source body. By force, we mean that which gives rise to the acceleration of
target bodies through space. [Note: Orbiting bodies do accelerate through space
even if gravity is geometry and not a true force. For example, one spacecraft
following another in the same orbit can stretch a tether between the two. The
taut tether then describes a straight line, and the path of both spacecraft
will be curved with respect to it.] We will examine the explanations offered by
GR for these phenomena. And we will confront the dilemma that remains when we
are through: whether to give up our existing interpretation of GR, or the
principle of causality.
In
the top half of the figure, we consider the view from the source. A fixed
source body on the left (for example, the Sun) sends a projectile (the arrow, which
could also be a photon) toward a moving target (for example, the Earth).
Infinitely far to the right are shown a bright (large, 5-pointed) star and a
faint (small, 4-pointed) star, present to define directions in space. Because
of transit delay, in order to hit the target, the source body must send the
projectile when it is seen in the direction of the faint star, but send it
toward the direction of the bright star, leading the target. The tangent of the
lead angle (the angle between the two stars) is the ratio of the tangential
target speed to the radial projectile speed. For small angles, this ratio
equals the lead angle in radians.
In
the bottom half of the figure, we consider the view from the target, which will
consider itself at rest and the source moving. By the principle of relativity,
this view is just as valid since no experiment can determine which of two
bodies in uniform, linear relative motion is “really moving” and which is not.
The projectile will be seen to approach from the retarded position of the
source, which is the spatial direction headed toward the faint star. The angle
between the true and retarded positions of the source, which equals the angle
between the two stars, is called “aberration”. It will readily be recognized as
the same angle defined in the first view due to transit delay.
Indeed,
that is generally true: The initial and final positions of the target as viewed
from the source differ by the motion of the target during the transit delay of
the projectile. The same difference between initial and final positions of the
source as viewed from the target is called the angle of aberration. Expressed
in angular form, both are equal, and are manifestations of the finite
propagation speed of the projectile as viewed from different frames. So the
most basic way to measure the speed of propagation of any entity, whether
particle or wave or dual entity or neither, is to measure transit delay, or
equivalently, the angle of aberration.
1. The effect of aberration on orbits is not seen
As
viewed from the Earth’s frame, light from the Sun has aberration. Light
requires about 8.3 minutes to arrive from the Sun, during which time the Sun
seems to move through an angle of 20 arc seconds. The arriving sunlight shows
us where the Sun was 8.3 minutes ago. The true, instantaneous position of the
Sun is about 20 arc seconds east of its visible position, and we will see the
Sun in its true present position about 8.3 minutes into the future. In the same
way, star positions are displaced from their yearly average position by up to
20 arc seconds, depending on the relative direction of the Earth’s motion
around the Sun. This well-known phenomenon is classical aberration, and was
discovered by the astronomer Bradley in 1728.
Orbit
computations must use true, instantaneous positions of all masses when
computing accelerations due to gravity for the reason given by Eddington. When
orbits are complete, the visible position of any mass can be computed by
allowing for the delay of light traveling from that mass to Earth. This
difference between true and apparent positions of bodies is not merely an
optical illusion, but is a physical difference due to transit delay that can
alter an observer’s momentum. For example, small bodies such as dust particles
in circular orbit around the Sun experience a mostly radial force due to the
radiation pressure of sunlight. But because of the finite speed of light, a
portion of that radial force acts in a transverse direction, like a drag,
slowing the orbital speed of the dust particles and causing them to eventually
spiral into the Sun. This phenomenon is known as the Poynting-Robertson effect.
If
gravity were a simple force that propagated outward from the Sun at the speed
of light, as radiation pressure does, its mostly radial effect would also have
a small transverse component because of the motion of the target. Analogous to
the Poynting-Robertson effect, the magnitude of that tangential force acting on
the Earth would be 0.0001 of the Sun’s radial force, which is the ratio of the
Earth’s orbital speed (30 km/s) to the speed of this hypothetical force of
gravity moving at light-speed (300,000 km/s). It would act continuously, but
would tend to speed the Earth up rather than slow it down because gravity is
attractive and radiation pressure is repulsive. Nonetheless, the net effect of
such a force would be to double the Earth’s distance from the Sun in 1200
years. There can be no doubt from astronomical observations that no such force
is acting. The computation using the instantaneous positions of Sun and Earth
is the correct one. The computation using retarded positions is in conflict
with observations. From the absence of such an effect, Laplace set a lower
limit to the speed of propagation of classical gravity of about 108 c, where c
is the speed of light. (Laplace, 1825, pp. 642-645 of translation)
In
the general case, let
be
the speed of propagation of gravitational force, and let
be
the initial semi-major axis at time
of
an orbiting body in a system where the product of the gravitational constant
and the total system mass is
.
Then the following formula, derived from the ordinary perturbation formulas of
celestial mechanics (e.g., Danby, 1988, p. 327), allows us to compute the
semi-major axis
at
any other time
:
We
will use this formula later to set limits on
.
2. Gravity and light do not act in parallel directions
There
is no cause to doubt that photons arriving now from the Sun left 8.3 minutes
ago, and arrive at Earth from the direction against the sky that the Sun
occupied that long ago. But the analogous situation for gravity is less
obvious, and we must always be careful not to mix in the consequences of light
propagation delays. Another way (besides aberration) to represent what gravity
is doing is to measure the acceleration vector for the Earth’s motion, and ask
if it is parallel to the direction of the arriving photons. If it is, that
would argue that gravity propagated to Earth with the same speed as light; and
conversely.
Such
measurements of Earth’s acceleration through space are now easy to make using
precise timing data from stable pulsars in various directions on the sky. Any
movement of the Earth in any direction is immediately reflected in a decreased
delay in the time of arrival of pulses toward that direction, and an increased
delay toward the opposite direction. In principle, Earth’s orbit could be
determined from pulsar timings alone. In practice, the orbit determined from
planetary radar ranging data is checked with pulsar timing data and found
consistent with it to very high precision.
How
then does the direction of Earth’s acceleration compare with the direction of
the visible Sun? By direct calculation from geometric ephemerides fitted to
such observations, such as those published by the U.S. Naval Observatory or the
Development Ephemerides of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Earth accelerates
toward a point 20 arc seconds in front of the visible Sun, where the Sun will
appear to be in 8.3 minutes. In other words, the acceleration now is toward the
true, instantaneous direction of the Sun now, and is not parallel to the
direction of the arriving solar photons now. This is additional evidence that
forces from electromagnetic radiation pressure and from gravity do not have the
same propagation speed.
3. The solar eclipse test
Yet
another manifestation of the difference between the propagation speeds of gravity
and light can be seen in the case of solar eclipses (Van Flandern, 1993, pp.
49-50). The Moon, being relatively nearby and sharing the Earth’s 30 km/s
orbital motion around the Sun, has relatively little aberration (0.7 arc
seconds, due to the Moon’s 1 km/s orbital speed around Earth). The Sun, as
mentioned earlier, has an aberration of just over 20 arc seconds. It takes the
Moon about 38 seconds of time to move 20 arc seconds on the sky relative to the
Sun. Since the observed times of eclipses of the Sun by the Moon agree with
predicted times to within a couple of seconds, we can use the orbits of the Sun
and the Moon near times of maximum solar eclipse to compare the time of
predicted gravitational maximum with the time of visible maximum eclipse.
In
practice, the maximum gravitational perturbation by the Sun on the orbit of the
Moon near eclipses may be taken as the time when the lunar and solar longitudes
are equal. Details of the procedure are provided in the reference cited. We
find that maximum eclipse occurs roughly 38±1.9 seconds of time, on
average, before the time of gravity maximum. If gravity is a propagating force,
this 3-body (Sun-Moon-Earth) test implies that gravity propagates at least 20
times faster than light.
1. Myth: Gravity from an accelerating source experiences light-time delay
First,
we will calculate the acceleration predicted for any two stars if each star
responds to the linearly extrapolated retarded position and velocity, but not
acceleration, of its companion over one light time between the stars. This
would be consistent with the electromagnetic analogy. In Figure 3, we will
consider the orbit of component A relative to component B during the light time
between the two stars. We will then consider three positions of component A:
its true, instantaneous position, At; its retarded position one
light time ago, Ar; and its linearly extrapolated position one light
time ahead from its retarded position, Ae. As before, let the
product of the gravitational constant and the total system mass be
,
and the radius of A’s circular orbit around B be
.
Also let the speed of light be c,
and A’s orbital period be
.
Finally,
is
the angle at B through which A moves during the light time
,
and
is
the angle at B between Ae and At. By construction, the
linear distance from Ar to Ae is equal to the length of
the arc from Ar to At, and both are equal to
.
The
difference in the distance of Ae and At from B causes
only small, non-cumulative effects on the orbit. However, the angle
causes
the extrapolated retarded position to feel a transverse force component that
continually increases the orbital period
.
From the triangles in the figure we see that
.
Since
is
normally a very small angle, we can expand the arctangent into a series and
retain only significant terms. The result is
.
However,
is
times
the light time, or
.
So the transverse perturbing acceleration
,
which is
times
the radial orbital acceleration
,
can be found from
.
Finally, from (Danby, 1988, p. 327) and with some minor change of variables and
simplification, we arrive at:
Now
we are ready to compare this prediction for binary pulsars PSR1913+16 and
PSR1534+12 with the measured values of
in
the two best-observed cases. Orbital quantities are taken from (Taylor et al.,
1992) – see Table I. The period change rate for PSR1534+12 is not yet seen, so
the table shows the observational error of the measurement. At a glance, we see
there is no possible match. The predicted period changes that would result if
gravity propagated at the speed of light in a manner analogous to electromagnetic
forces are orders of magnitude larger than the observed period changes. For
PSR1913+16, they have the opposite sign as well. From PSR1534+12, we can set a
lower limit to the speed of gravity as an electromagnetic-type propagating
force: 2800
.
In
concluding this section, we should also note that, even in the solar system,
the Sun moves around the barycenter in a path that often takes the barycenter a
million kilometers or so from the Sun. So the idea that the Sun’s field can be
treated as “static” and unchanging is not a good approximation even for our own
planetary system. The Sun’s motion during the light time to the planets is
appreciable, yet its gravity field is continually updated without apparent
delay.
2. Myth: Gravitational waves contribute to gravitational force
Few
subjects in physics are in such a state of confusion as is the subject of
gravitational waves. Normally, this term is synonymous with gravitational
radiation, a hypothetical, ultra-weak disturbance of space-time induced by a
certain type of asymmetric change in the distribution of matter called a
quadrupole moment. It is supposed to be analogous to accelerating charges
emitting photons. This form of radiation is predicted by GR. The acceleration
of binary pulsar PSR1913+16 is said to be in accord with the predicted amount
of gravitational radiation, and therefore to provide an indirect confirmation
of the prediction. However, attempts to detect gravitational waves in the
laboratory from any source have yet to yield events that have convinced a
consensus of their reality. The LIGO experiment is being designed to provide
definitive detections, assuming these waves exist.
When
gravitational waves were predicted, it was natural to associate them with
supernova explosions, since no known event in nature redistributes mass in
space more rapidly. However, the explosion must be asymmetric to produce
gravitational waves. Because the gravitational field of the supernova is
changing rapidly during the explosion, it is natural to associate the
production of gravitational waves with changes in gravitational fields. So far,
so good.
However,
many physicists do more than associate the two concepts, and consider that
changes in gravitational fields are gravitational waves. The heart of
this confusion is illustrated by the following passage from (Synge, 1960):
“Suppose that a man, standing on the earth, holds in his hand a heavy club. At
first the club hangs down toward the ground, but at a certain moment the man
raises it quickly over his head. Any theory of gravitation recognizes that the
club produces a gravitational field, however minute it may be, and that the
action of the man changes that field, not only in his neighborhood, but
throughout the whole universe. According to Newtonian theory, the effect is
instantaneously felt on the moon, on the sun and in every remote nebula. Since
we are not concerned with Newtonian theory, we do not have to discuss the
absurdity of this. As relativists, familiar with the idea that no causal effect
can travel faster than light, ..., we would guess that the change in the
gravitational field of the moving club travels out into space with the speed of
light. And we would call this moving disturbance a gravitational wave.
Thus, on a very general basis, we must regard the physical existence of
gravitational waves, so understood, as self-evident.”
The
sudden displacement of the club may cause a disturbance of space-time, which
would be a form of gravitational radiation. Separately, if gravitation is itself
some sort of wave phenomenon, changes in gravitational fields will propagate
away from a source as waves. Now there is no doubt that changes in
gravitational fields exist, or that they can be detected in the laboratory.
Therefore, this phenomenon cannot be the same thing as gravitational radiation,
since the latter has not yet been reliably detected, and its existence still
remains unverified. However, both phenomena are called “gravitational waves”
without further distinction. For the former type, we must look to ultra-small
accelerations of distant, massive pulsars for some hint of their existence. For
the latter type, we see indirect evidence of changes in the gravitational
fields of Sun and Moon every day in the tides, or can measure them directly
with a gravimeter. We can even measure gravitational field changes using small
masses in a purely laboratory setting.
The
consequences of this distinction become clearer when we are careful to
distinguish sources and targets of gravity. Ordinary gravitational acceleration
of a target results from some form of communication from a source of gravity
that may or may not be carried from source to target in wave form. Separately,
the acceleration of a target body must change the nearby space-time, and such changes
seem likely to be propagated outward in wave form away from the target. If
possible waves associated with sources of gravity (those that may induce
acceleration in other bodies), and other possible waves induced by targets of
gravity (those that result from acceleration), are not distinguished, we are
certain to have massive confusion over the meaning of the very concept of “the
speed of gravity”.
In
a binary pulsar, where both masses are comparable, both stars may emit
gravitational radiation. But each would do so as a consequence of its
acceleration induced by the other, not as a consequence of its own gravity.
Moreover, as we noted earlier, gravitational waves in the sense of
gravitational radiation cause orbiting bodies to lose angular momentum; whereas
gravitational aberration that must accompany any finite speed of propagation of
gravity from a source to a target would cause orbits to gain angular momentum.
Therefore,
it seems fairly certain that, if gravitational radiation exists, its waves will
propagate at the speed of light. In what way this type of disturbance of
space-time may differ from very-long-wavelength electromagnetic disturbances of
space-time, if indeed it does differ, remains to be seen.
By
contrast, the speed of propagation of gravitational fields and of changes in
those fields, whatever the nature of the propagating agents, are different
matters, and pose a question we hope to answer in this paper.
1. Is gravity caused by a curvature of space and time?
A
common way to explain why gravity can appear to act instantaneously, yet still
propagate with a delay, is the rubber sheet analogy. (See Figure 4.) A large
mass sitting on a rubber sheet would make a large indentation, and that
indentation would induce smaller nearby masses to roll toward the indentation.
This is an analogy for curved space-time, which is likewise supposed to be the
cause of bodies accelerating toward large masses. The reasoning in the analogy
further suggests that target bodies simply respond instantly to the local
curvature of the underlying space-time medium (like the rubber sheet).
Therefore, any delay associated with altering that local curvature would not
produce aberration, and the target body would appear to respond instantaneously
to the source unless the source suddenly changed its motion.
The
rubber sheet analogy is represented as a way of visualizing why bodies attract
one another. However, in that regard, it is highly defective. A target body
sitting on the side of an indentation would stay in place, with no tendency to
roll downhill, unless there were already a force such as gravity underneath the
rubber sheet pulling everything downhill. And this failure of the analogy helps
us identify the precise problem with the curved space-time description of
gravity – the lack of causality. Without consideration of why a target body is
induced to accelerate through space, and how quickly it receives updates of
information about how to accelerate through space, neither the space-time
curvature explanation nor the rubber sheet analogy can help us understand why
gravity appears to act so much faster than light.
Moreover,
contrary to what the rubber sheet analogy implies, an orbiting body such as a
spacecraft orbiting the Earth is not following the curvature of space near the
Earth. As we remarked earlier, two spacecraft some distance apart in the same
orbit could stretch a tether between them and pull it taut, thereby describing
a straight line through space different from their orbital path. In more
mathematical terms, the supposed curvature of space-time produced by a
gravitational field is an effect proportional to the local gravitational
potential
,
the variable part of which is in turn proportional to
,
where
is
orbital speed. Yet, orbital curvature through space, like stellar aberration,
is proportional to
,
a much larger effect. For example, for the Earth orbiting the Sun,
is
of order 10-4, and
is
of order 10-8. So we see that almost all of the acceleration of
bodies through space is not a consequence of the curvature of space. In the GR
explanation, the acceleration through space is due to the curvature of
“space-time”, a mathematical entity not to be confused with the combined
separate concepts of space and time.
While
relativists have always been partial to the curved space-time explanation of
gravity, it is not an essential feature of GR. Eddington (1920, p. 109) was
already aware of the mostly equivalent “refracting medium” explanation for GR
features, which retains Euclidean space and time in the same mathematical
formalism. In essence, the bending of light, gravitational redshift, Mercury
perihelion advance, and radar time delay can all be consequences of
electromagnetic wave motion through an underlying refracting medium that is made
denser in proportion to the nearness of a source of gravity. (Van Flandern,
1993, pp. 62-67 and Van Flandern, 1994) And it is now known that even ordinary
matter has certain electromagnetic-wave-like characteristics. The principal
objection to this conceptually simpler refraction interpretation of GR is that
a faster-than-light propagation speed for gravity itself is required. In the
context of this paper, that cannot be considered as a fatal objection.
Lastly,
we note experimental evidence from neutron interferometers that purports to
demonstrate a failure of the geometric weak equivalence principle, that gravity
is due to a curvature of space-time. (Greenberger & Overhauser, 1980) This
experiment confirmed the strong equivalence principle (local equivalence of a
uniform acceleration and a gravitational field), but its results are
incompatible with the geometrical weak equivalence principle because
interference effects in quantum mechanics depend on the mass. This is because
the wave nature of the neutron depends on the momentum of the neutron, which is
mass times velocity. So all phase-dependent phenomena depend on the mass
through the wavelength, a feature intrinsic to quantum mechanics.
Since
the experiment confirms the applicability of quantum mechanics even in the
presence of gravity, including this non-geometrical mass dependence, the
experiment seems to be a step in the undermining of the purely geometrical
point of view, and “tends to bother theorists who prefer to think of gravity as
being intrinsically related to geometry”, according to the authors.
2. Does GR really reduce to Newtonian gravity in low-velocity, weak-field limit?
As
we have already noted, Newtonian gravity propagates with unconditionally
infinite speed. How, then, can GR reduce to Newtonian gravity in the
weak-field, low-velocity limit? The answer is that conservation of angular
momentum is implicit in the assumptions on which GR rests. However, as we have
already seen, finite propagation speeds and conservation of angular momentum
are incompatible. Therefore, GR was forced to claim that gravity is not a force
that propagates in any classical sense, and that aberration does not apply.
In
practice, this suppression of aberration is done through so-called “retarded potentials”.
In electromagnetism, these are called “Lienard-Wiechert potentials”. For
examples of the use of retarded potentials, see (Misner et al., 1973, p. 1080)
or (Feynman, 1963, p. 21-4). Suppose we let
be
the gravitational potential at a field point
and
time
,
be
the gravitational constant,
be
an element of volume in the source of the potential,
be
the coordinates of that volume element in the source,
be
the matter density at point
and
time
,
,
be
the distance from the source volume element at time
to
the field point at time
,
and
be
the relative velocity between the field point and the source. Then two
different forms of retarded potentials in common use for gravitation are these:
In
[3], we have used
as
the retarded time. Then the triple integral evaluates the density one light
time ago in place of the present density, as might be useful if a
non-spherically symmetric source body were rotating. In [4], the mutual
distance is taken to depend on the scalar distance of the source one light time
ago.
However,
in neither form of retarded potential is any consideration given to the
transverse motion between source and target during the light time; i.e., the
aberration. Ignoring aberration is logically equivalent to adopting an infinite
propagation speed for gravitational force. That point is glossed over by
emphasizing that the density distribution or the mutual distance is being taken
at its retarded position, as if a finite propagation speed for gravity were
being adopted. Nevertheless, the only practical consequence of a finite
propagation speed that matters in most applications is missing from these
potentials. And that clever trick then allows a theory with “gravity
propagating at the speed of light” to be equivalent to a theory with infinite
propagation speed in the weak-field, low velocity limit.
In
short, both GR and Newtonian gravity use infinite propagation speeds with
aberration equal to zero. In Newton’s laws, that fact is explicitly recognized
even though aberration and delay terms do not appear because of an infinity in
their denominator. In GR, much effort has been expended in disguising the
continued absence of the same delay terms by including retardation effects in
ways that are presently unobservable and ignoring aberration. Every physicist
and physics student should be at least annoyed at having been tricked by this
sleight of hand, and should demand that the neglect of aberration be clearly
justified by those who propose to do so.
In
attempts to describe how GR can affect distant bodies seemingly without delay,
relativists often speak of the field of a body as if it were a rigid extension
of the body itself. If such a “static” field has no moving parts, it then would
have no need of a propagation speed unless something changes. The objection to
this picture is that it is acausal. Somehow, momentum is transferred from a
source body to a target body. It seems impossible to conceive of a static field
with literally no moving parts as capable of transferring momentum. This is the
dilemma of the “rubber sheet” analogy again. Just because a rubber sheet or
space-time is curved, why should a stationary target body on the slope of such
a curve begin moving toward the source? What is the source of the momentum
change?
To
retain causality, we must distinguish two distinct meanings of the term
“static”. One meaning is unchanging in the sense of no moving parts. The other
meaning is sameness from moment to moment by continual replacement of all
moving parts. We can visualize this difference by thinking of a waterfall. A
frozen waterfall is static in the first sense, and a flowing waterfall is
static in the second sense. Both are essentially the same at every moment, yet
the latter has moving parts capable of transferring momentum, and is made of
entities that propagate.
As
this applies to gravitational fields for a fixed source, if the field were
static in the first sense, there would be no need of aberration, but also no
apparent causality link between source and target. If the field were static in
the second sense, then the propagation speed of the entities carrying momentum
would give rise to aberration; and the observed absence of aberration demands a
propagation speed far greater than lightspeed.
So
are gravitational fields for a rigid, stationary source frozen, or continually
regenerated? Causality seems to require the latter. If such fields are frozen,
then what is the mechanism for updating them as the source moves, even
linearly? Even a “rigid” bar pushed at one end would not move at the other end
until a pressure wave had propagated its entire length. Moreover, we seem to
need two mechanisms – one to curve space-time when a mass approaches, and
another to unbend it when the mass recedes. This is because, once a curve is
“frozen” into space-time, it will not necessarily “melt” back to its original
condition when the cause is removed. Yet, there is no available cause for
either process to result from a field with no moving parts.
We
can also deduce the consequences for a source in continual acceleration, such
as the Sun in our solar system. The Sun’s path around the solar system
barycenter induced by planetary perturbations causes excursions of over a
million kilometers, and the barycenter is sometimes outside the physical body
of the Sun. So the Sun’s field must be continually updated at all distances to
infinity. Surely, this updating requires the propagation of causal agents from
the source. And since the source is continually accelerating, the regeneration
of the distant field must likewise be a continuous process, requiring
propagation. However, propagation involves delays, and even in the solar
system, we have observationally ruled out delays as great as lightspeed
propagation would produce. For example, the solar eclipse experiment is
sensitive to delays in the continual updating of the Earth’s field by the Sun
as they both affect the Moon, and update speeds of at least 20
are
required.
The
binary pulsar experiment provides another, more direct demonstration that even
changes in gravitational fields must propagate faster than light. Ultimately,
GR proposes that such changes appear to act instantaneously in the “near
field”, but eventually show their true, light-speed-delayed character in the
“far field”, which is conveniently beyond our present ability to observe. The
necessity of this dual behavior is to prevent the logical need for changes to
continue to appear to act instantaneously at ever increasing distances, even to
infinity.
However,
let us suppose we have a binary black hole, with the two collapsed stars in
elliptical orbits around one another. See Figure 5. Then each field must be
continually updated by a changing contribution from the orbiting field of the
other. How does each field know what it is supposed to do if it is no longer in
communication with its source mass hidden behind an event horizon? If the
curvature of space-time at a point near black hole A becomes zero because black
hole B is equally distant, what makes it non-zero again once black hole B
recedes?
Indeed,
if each source mass is forced to accelerate, why should each field point with a
certain curvature undergo exactly the same acceleration as the source, making the
whole field (to infinity?) appear frozen rigidly to the parent black hole?
Perturbations by the other star are different at every different field point,
so each such space-time field point should experience a different acceleration.
With no communication, how can the whole system remain intact and coherent?
We
conclude that the concept of frozen gravitational fields is acausal and
paradoxical. Gravitational fields must continually regenerate, like a flowing
waterfall. In doing so, they must consist of entities that propagate. And the
speed of propagation of those entities must greatly exceed the speed of light.
Conclusion: The Speed of Gravity is ³ 2x1010 c
We
conclude that gravitational fields, even “static” ones, continually regenerate
through entities that must propagate at some very high speed,
.
We call this the speed of gravity. Equation [1] then tells us how orbits will
expand in response to this large but finite propagation speed, since the field
itself, and not merely changes in the field, will transfer momentum to orbiting
target bodies. Rewriting equation [1] in a form suitable for comparisons with
observations, we derive:
For
the Earth’s orbit,
=
1 year,
=
10-4, and we take as an upper limit to
the
value 2.4x10-12/year (derived from ½
)
in solutions using radar ranging and spacecraft data (Pitjeva, 1993).
Substituting these values, we get from Earth-orbit data that
³ 109
c.
Using
the same equation with binary pulsar PSR1534+12 and the parameters in Table I,
we can place the most stringent limit yet from the observed uncertainty in
:
³ 2x1010
c.
A
direct experimental verification in the laboratory that gravity propagates
faster than light may now be possible. The protocol and preliminary results
were reported in (Walker, 1997).
It
might be tempting to conclude that the speed of gravity is infinite. But these
limits on
are
still a long way from infinite velocity, and Newton’s statement, quoted at the
beginning of this paper, still seems applicable. Infinite speeds, too, are
acausal.
Einstein
special relativity (SR) is able to prove based on its premises that nothing can
propagate faster than the speed of light in forward time. Is our result for the
speed of gravity an experimental falsification of SR? The correct answer must
be a qualified “yes and no”. Strictly, the minor new interpretation of SR
needed for consistency with our result is no more a falsification of SR than GR
was a falsification of Newtonian gravity. In both cases, the earlier theory was
incomplete rather than wrong. We will now examine exactly what must change
about SR for full consistency with all existing experimental evidence and this
new result as well.
A
brief overview of the history of relativity will provide useful background for
this section, since everything proposed here has been proposed before. The
“principle of relativity”, that the laws of physics should be the same as
viewed from any inertial frame, dates to the 19th century, well
before it was popularized by H. Poincare. The well known “Lorentz
transformations” embody that principle, but were not original when Lorentz
adopted them for his own theory of relativity, first published in 1904 in an
“aether” context. Einstein’s main contribution with his famous 1905 paper,
then, was the addition of a second postulate, that the speed of light will be
locally the same for all observers regardless of their own state of motion.
This did away with the need for an aether, or more generally, with a preferred
frame of reference.
The
ensuing years saw much discussion of whether nature was more like Einstein’s SR
or Lorentzian relativity (LR). The experiments relevant to testing relativity
are listed in
Table II. The discovery of Fresnel drag had seemed at first to demand the existence of an aether, but relativists eventually found ways to explain it using SR too. The Airy water-filled telescope experiment showed that the aberration of starlight was unchanged by passing through a water medium even though that medium slowed the speed of light by about 30%. This too seemed to favor the existence of a preferred frame because the local speed of light did not affect aberration, showing that aberration was determined outside the telescope rather than by the conditions most local to the observer. However, Einstein supporters could also explain this result using SR, albeit with somewhat more complexity.
The
Michelson-Morley experiment is the first (and only) observation that seemed to strongly
favor SR over LR, although Michelson himself never accepted that. The expected
aether-drift speed did not put in an appearance in the test results, and the
speed of light did indeed seem to be the same in all directions, as SR
postulated, even though the observer was obviously moving at high speed in some
direction through space. It was not until the last decade that serious
consideration was given to the possibility that the local gravity field may
always constitute a preferred frame. This idea was popularized in (Beckmann,
1987) and then widely discussed in the journals Galilean Electrodynamics
<http://mywebpages.comcast.net/adring/>
and Apeiron <http://redshift.vif.com/Apeiron_Home.htm>,
and occasionally in the Meta Research Bulletin <http://www.metaresearch.org>.
It
is now well-established that LR is fully compatible with the Michelson-Morley
experiment, and in general with the expectation that the speed of light will
seem to be the same even when the observer is moving provided that certain
conditions are met, although not under all circumstances. That the speed of
light is independent of the speed of its source is unremarkable, since that is
a property of all wave motion. However, being independent of the speed of the
observer is special. Choosing to synchronize clocks using the Einstein
convention automatically makes one-way speed of light independent of the speed
of the observer because that assumption is built into the Einstein
synchronization method. If some other convention were used to synchronize
clocks, such as synchronizing them to an underlying common inertial frame (as
is done for the Global Positioning System satellites, or when astronomers
synchronize phenomena to a barycentric frame using time provided by distant
pulsars), then the one-way speed of light would be different in each direction
when measured by observers moving with respect to that special frame. The
round-trip speed of light uses a single clock to measure elapsed time, and so
does not depend on synchronization. But if the rate of an ordinary clock is
affected by its speed in a Lorentzian way, which we now know to be the case,
then the measured speed of light will appear to be an invariant in all
directions. Using a clock whose rate is not affected by its translational
speed, for example pulses in the strength of the gravitational field from a
compact, massive binary star, would apparently allow the speed of the observer
relative to the local mean gravity field to be detected.
Following
the publication of Einstein’s SR paper, two new experimental results were
published in 1913, both favoring LR over SR. Indeed, Sagnac claimed a
falsification of SR on the grounds that the local speed of light was affected
by observer velocity if the observer was attached to a rotating platform. He
showed that the Michelson-Morley experiment performed in such a rotating frame
did show fringe shifts, and concluded that, even if linear motion was relative,
rotational motion was absolute. DeSitter noted that stellar aberration was the
same for both components of distant binary stars, even though the relative
velocity of each with respect to the observer was quite different. Therefore
velocity in some special frame (we might now say velocity in the local gravity
field relative to the distant gravity field) rather than relative velocity
between source and observer determines aberration. Both of these experiments
were blows to SR’s contention that all motion was relative. Nonetheless, SR
supporters came up with explanations of these phenomena too in an SR context,
and these fairly non-trivial explanations are the subjects of textbooks on
relativity today.
The
Michelson-Gale experiment of 1925 involving the same Michelson as in the
Michelson-Morley experiment again claimed a contradiction of SR – a theory that
Michelson never found acceptable. History has concluded that this experiment is
essentially another demonstration of the Sagnac effect, and no longer cites it
as a significant independent experiment; so it is omitted from our table. Ives
and Stilwell (1938) drew conclusions similar to those of Michelson, and
specifically argued that their own experiment confirmed LR (which they called
the Larmor-Lorentz theory) over SR. Yet today, it is simply added to the list
of SR-confirming experiments.
When
the muon lifetime experiments were performed in the 1960s, LR had been all but
forgotten. Questions were raised briefly about whether the situation was
reciprocal – whether high-speed muons would really see laboratory muons live
longer. SR offered assurance that they would, but no test was then possible. By
the time the Hafele-Keating experiment compared traveling atomic clocks sent
around the world in opposite directions with a stay-at-home clock, an
experiment later improved upon by C.O. Alley at the Univ. of Maryland, it was
no longer considered remarkable that the velocity effects on clocks had to be
based on speeds in the underlying inertial frame instead of the relative
velocities of the clocks.
Finally,
the Global Positioning System (GPS) showed the remarkable fact that all atomic
clocks on board orbiting satellites moving at high speeds in different
directions could be simultaneously and continuously synchronized with each
other and with all ground clocks. No “relativity of simultaneity” corrections,
as required by SR, were needed. This too seemed initially to falsify SR. But on
further inspection, continually changing synchronization corrections for each
clock exist such that the predictions of SR are fulfilled for any local
co-moving frame. To avoid the embarrassment of that complexity, GPS analysis is
now done exclusively in the Earth-centered inertial frame (the local gravity
field). And the pre-launch adjustment of clock rates to compensate for
relativistic effects then hides the fact that all orbiting satellite clocks
would be seen to tick slower than ground clocks if not rate-compensated for
their orbital motion, and that no reciprocity would exist when satellites view
ground clocks.
Why
then did SR win out over LR? Three circumstances conspired to make SR appear to
be the better solution to describing nature in the early years of the 20th
century. (1) Classical thinking about the aether almost always involved a
universal field rather than a local field. No one took seriously that each
local gravity field might serve as a preferred frame for local observers. Yet
that now seems the case. (2) The wave nature of matter had not yet been
discovered by deBroglie. Before that happened, there was no logical reason to
expect that clocks based ultimately on atomic oscillations would have their
rates affected by observer motion in the same way that the speed of light would
be affected by observer motion, rendering observer motion undetectable in
experiments. However, that also now seems to be true (Van Flandern, 1993, p.
72-77). (3) The success of GR in predicting the light-bending effect at the
1918 solar eclipse gained great credibility for GR, and SR benefited from this
success because it was widely believed that GR was based on SR. But GR is
usually implemented using a preferred frame closely coinciding with the local
gravity field, with the consequence that only the features that SR and LR have
in common were integrated into GR. The reciprocity of time dilation between two
inertial frames, a key way in which SR differs from LR, plays no role in GR.
The
principal differences between the two relativity theories stem from the
equivalence of all inertial frames in SR, and the existence of a preferred
frame in LR. Otherwise, SR’s time dilation is equivalent to LR’s clock slowing;
SR’s space contraction is equivalent to LR’s meter-stick shrinkage; and SR’s
change in the momentum of moving bodies is equivalent to LR’s. However, LR
recognizes a “universal time” apart from the time kept by electromagnetic-based
clocks affected by motion. And the law of addition of velocities between two frames,
neither of which is the preferred frame, is different in LR than in SR. For a
derivation of this law and the revised form of the Lorentz transformations for
Lorentzian universal time, see (Mansouri & Sexl, 1977). For our purposes
here, we simply note that the proof that nothing can propagate faster than the
speed of light in forward time does not apply to LR.
Near
the end of his career, Lorentz is quoted as having graciously conceded the contest:
“My theory can obtain all the same results as special relativity, but perhaps
not with a comparable simplicity.” (private communication from C.O. Alley)
Today, with hindsight, we might make a somewhat different assessment: “Special
relativity can explain all the experimental results in Table II that Lorentzian
relativity can, but perhaps not with a comparable simplicity.” Even so, SR
cannot explain the faster-than-light propagation of gravity, although LR
readily can.
We
conclude that the speed of gravity may provide the new insight physics has been
awaiting to lead the way to unification of the fundamental forces. As shown in
(Van Flandern, 1993, pp. 80-85 and Van Flandern, 1996), it may also be
connected with the explanation of the dark matter problem in cosmology.
Moreover, the modest switch from SR to LR may correct the “wrong turn” physics
must have made to get into the dilemma presented by quantum mechanics, that
there appears to be no “deep reality” to the world around us. Quantum phenomena
that violate the locality criterion may now be welcomed into conventional
physics.
The
author is indebted to numerous correspondents who have challenged the
conclusions of this paper in so many different ways, especially in USENET
discussion groups such as sci.physics, sci.physics.relativity and sci.astro.
Each of these challenges has forced a new and deeper investigation, without all
of which the present paper could never have hoped to pass peer review. One
relativist in particular, Steve Carlip of UC Davis, had the patience to stay
with this issue over a span of several years, defending the GR interpretation
to the fullest extent possible. Between us we have written enough prose,
created enough analogies, pondered enough equations, and consulted enough
references to fill a book.
The
author further thanks Jeffery Kooistra for his key role. His Analog
article (Kooistra, 1997) flushed this subject to the forefront once again, and
his inquiries to both Steve Carlip and to the author forced us to explain our
positions in layman’s language, and thereby diverted us from talking past one
another. Discussions with colleagues too numerous to mention must likewise be
acknowledged. But Jean-Pierre Vigier, in addition to several penetrating
questions, encouraged the author to stop talking and start writing, promising a
fair peer review process at the conclusion. Without such encouragement, this
paper would certainly not have come into existence.
[Final version published: Physics Letters A
250:1-11 (1998); also: Infinite Energy 5 #27:50-58 (1999).
See published comment: G.E. Marsch, C. Nissim-Sabat,
“Comments on ‘The speed of gravity’”, Phys.Lett.A 262:103-106 (1999).
See response: T. Van Flandern, “Reply to comments on
‘The speed of gravity’”, Phys.Lett.A 262:261-263 (1999).
See additional comment: S. Carlip, “Aberration and
the speed of gravity”, Phys.Lett.A 267:81-87 (2000).
See response to above and all other
comments: “Experimental Repeal of the Speed Limit for Gravitational,
Electrodynamic, and Quantum Field Interactions”, T. Van Flandern and J.P.
Vigier, Foundations of Physics 32:1031-1068 (2002).
As of 2006/02/04, no further comment
or criticism has appeared.]
Beckmann, P., Einstein Plus Two, Golem Press
(1987).
Danby, J.M.A., Fundamentals of Celestial Mechanics,
Willmann-Bell, Richmond, VA (1988).
Eddington, A.E., Space, Time and Gravitation,
original printed in 1920, reprinted by Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge (1987).
Feynman, R.P., Leighton, R.B. and Sands, M., The Feynman
Lectures on Physics, Vol. II, Addison-Wesley, Reading, Mass. (1963).
Greenberger, D.M. and Overhauser, A.W., “The role of
gravity in quantum theory”, Sci.Amer. 242 (May):66-76 (1980).
Hoffman, B., Relativity and its Roots, Freeman,
New York, NY (1983).
Kooistra, J.D., “Paradigm shifty things”, Analog
CXVII #6:59-69 (1997).
Ives, H.E. and Stilwell, G.R., “An experimental study
of the rate of a moving atomic clock”, J.Opt.Soc.Amer. 28#7:215-226
(1938).
Laplace, P., Mechanique Celeste,
volumes published from 1799-1825, English translation reprinted by Chelsea
Publ., New York (1966).
Mansouri, R. and Sexl, R.U., “A test theory of
special relativity: I. Simultaneity and clock synchronization”, Gen.Rel.&Grav.
8:497-513 (1977).
Misner, C.W., K.S. Thorne & J.A. Wheeler,
Gravitation, W.H. Freeman & Co., San Francisco, CA (1973).
Pitjeva, E.V., “Experimental testing of relativity
effects, variability of the gravitational constant and topography of Mercury
surface from radar observations 1964-1989”, Cel.Mech.&Dyn.Astron.
55:313-321 (1993).
Synge, J.L., Relativity, North-Holland
Publishing Co., Amsterdam, Ch. IX (1960).
Taylor, J.H., Wolszczan, A., Damour, T. &
Weisberg, J.M., “Experimental constraints on strong-field relativistic gravity”,
Nature 355:132-136 (1992).
Van Flandern, T., Dark Matter, Missing Planets and
New Comets, North Atlantic Books, Berkeley, CA (1993).
Van Flandern, T., “Relativity with Flat Spacetime”, MetaRes.Bull.
3:9-13 [see <http://www.metaresearch.org>]
(1994).
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gravity”, Parts I & II, MetaRes.Bull. 5:23-29 & 38-50 [see <http://www.metaresearch.org>]
(1996).
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longitudinally oscillating electrical fields”, abstract in Causality and
Locality in Modern Physics and Astronomy: Open Questions and Possible Solutions,
S. Jeffers, ed., York University, North York, Ontario, #72 (1997).
Thomas C Van Flandern (June 26, 1940 – January 9, 2009) was an American astronomer and author specializing in celestial mechanics. Van Flandern had a career as a professional scientist, but was noted as an outspoken proponent of non-mainstream views related to astronomy, physics, and extra-terrestrial life. He also published the non-mainstream Meta Research Bulletin. He died of colon cancer in Seattle, Washington.[2]
Biography
Van Flandern graduated from Xavier University cum laude with a B.S. in Mathematics in 1962 and was awarded a teaching fellowship at Georgetown University.[8][9] He attended Yale University on a scholarship sponsored by the U.S. Naval Observatory (USNO),[citation needed] joining USNO in 1963.[10] In 1969 he received a PhD in Astronomy from Yale, with a dissertation on lunar occultations.
Van Flandern worked at the USNO until 1983,[11][12] first becoming Chief of the Research Branch[13] and later becoming Chief of the Celestial Mechanics Branch of the Nautical Almanac Office.[14][15][16] His espousal of highly non-mainstream beliefs, particularly the exploded planet hypothesis, eventually led to his separation from the USNO. He later said, "This forced me to the "fringes", areas of astronomy not accepted as credible by experts of the field".[17]
Following his separation from the USNO, Van Flandern started a business organizing eclipse viewing expeditions, and promoting his non-mainstream views in a newsletter and web site. Shortly after his death in 2009, Van Flandern's friend and associate David Dunham proposed that asteroid 52266 be named in his honor.[18]
Mainstream scientific work
During the mid-1970s, Van Flandern believed that lunar observations gave evidence of variation in Newton's gravitational constant (G), consistent with a speculative idea that had been put forward by Paul Dirac. In 1974, his essay "A Determination of the Rate of Change of G" was awarded second place by the Gravity Research Foundation.[19][20] However, in later years, with new data available, Van Flandern himself admitted his findings were flawed, and the conclusions were contradicted by more accurate findings based on radio measurements with the Viking landers.[21][22]Following claims by David Dunham in 1978 to have detected satellites for some asteroids (notably 532 Herculina) by examining the light patterns during stellar occultations,[23] Van Flandern and others began to report similar observations.[24] However, the reported findings were subsequently called into question by high resolution imaging from the Hubble telescope, which failed to detect satellites for the specific asteroids examined by Dunham and Van Flandern.[25]
Van Flandern and Henry Fliegel developed a compact algorithm to calculate a Julian date from a Gregorian date. They described this in a letter to the editor of a computing magazine in 1968.[26] This was available for use in business applications.[9]
With Kenneth Pulkkinen, he published "Low precision formulae for planetary positions", in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement in 1979.[27] According to Van Flandern's obituary, the paper set a record for the number of reprints requested from that journal.[9]
Non-mainstream science and beliefs
Van Flandern described in his book[28] how he had become increasingly dissatisfied with the mainstream view of science by the early 1980s. He wrote-
- Events in my life caused me to start questioning my goals and the correctness of everything I had learned. In matters of religion, medicine, biology, physics, and other fields, I came to discover that reality differed seriously from what I had been taught.
Exploding Planets
In 1976, while Van Flandern was employed by the USNO, he had began to promote the belief (first suggested by Olbers in the 1800s[29]) that major planets sometimes explode.[30] In his book Van Flandern described the negative reception of his ideas about exploding planets among mainstream scientists. Van Flandern also speculated that the origin of the human species may well have been on the planet Mars, which he believed was once a moon of a now-exploded "Planet V".Le Sage's theory of gravitation and the speed of gravity
Van Flandern supported Le Sage's discredited theory of gravitation, according to which gravity is the result of a flux of invisible "ultra-mundane corpuscles" impinging on all objects from all directions at superluminal speeds. He gave public lectures in which he claimed that these particles could be used as a limitless source of free energy, and to provide superluminal propulsion for spacecraft.[31][32] He also speculated that the ultra-mundane flux caused the explosion of a major planet once located between Mars and Jupiter.In 1998 Van Flandern wrote a paper[33] asserting that astronomical observations imply that gravity propagates at least twenty billion times faster than light. These claims were dismissed by mainstream physicists.[34][35]
Face on Mars
Van Flandern was a prominent advocate of the belief that certain geological features seen on Mars, especially the "face at Cydonia", are not of natural origin, but were produced by intelligent extra-terrestrial life, probably the inhabitants of a major planet once located where the asteroid belt presently exists, and which Van Flandern believed had exploded 3.2 million years ago.[36] The claimed artificiality of the "face" was also the topic of a chapter of his 1993 book.[37] He also gave lectures on the subject,[38] and at the conclusion of the lectures he described his overall conception:[citation needed]- "We've shown conclusively that at least some of the artifacts on the surface of Mars were artificially produced, and the evidence indicates they were produced approximately 3.2 million years ago, which is when Planet V exploded. Mars was a moon of Planet V, and we speculate that the Builders created the artificial structures as theme parks and advertisements to catch the attention of space tourists from Planet V (much as we may do on our own Moon some day, when lunar tourism becomes prevalent), or perhaps they are museums of some kind. Remember that the Face at Cydonia was located on the original equator of Mars. The Builder's civilization ended 3.2 million years ago. The evidence suggests that the explosion was anticipated, so the Builders may have departed their world, and it produced a massive flood, because Planet V was a water world. It is a coincidence that the face on Mars is hominid, like ours, and the earliest fossil record on Earth of hominids is the "Lucy" fossil from 3.2 million years ago. There have been some claims of earlier hominid fossils, but Lucy is the earliest that is definite. So I leave you with the thought that there may be a grain of truth in The War of the Worlds, with the twist that WE are the Martians.
Rejection of Big Bang Cosmology
Van Flandern was a vocal opponent of the Big Bang model in cosmology, and espoused instead a Steady-State cosmology. He compiled a list of what he regarded as problems for the Big Bang model. It began as a list of "Top 10" problems, then expanded to the "Top 30", and ultimately by 2008 had reached the "Top 60".[42] In 2008 he was an organizer of a conference of individuals who oppose the Big Bang cosmological models.[43] According to the report of one conference participant:- Most who attended were taking time off from their jobs or were self-employed. Only about eight were officially representing their own universities—myself included. Many others had been invited but were afraid to attend, afraid of being labelled by association with this group... Van Flandern was very dogmatic about not being dogmatic. He was convinced of his own belief in a static infinite eternal flat universe. He was quite forceful in putting his view, excluding all others.[44]
See also
References
- Jump up ^ Obituary
- Jump up ^ "Obituary". Sequim Gazette. January 21, 2009.
- Jump up ^ Cleveland Plain Dealer October 8, 1957 "Moonwatch Team Here Gets Set" page 5
- Jump up ^ The Pharos-Tribune and Logansport Press August 9, 1959 "Still Keeping Watch" Logansport, IN page 19
- Jump up ^ Xavier University News November 5, 1960 Mike Rogers "Satellite Spies Situate Tracking Station on Logan" page 1
- Jump up ^ Kingsport News May 17, 1961 "Reports Activity" page 10
- Jump up ^ The Anderson Herald May 17, 1961 "Cincy Moonwatchers Report on Satellites" page 2
- Jump up ^ Xavier University News May 4, 1962 "Tom Van Flandern Given Fellowship" page 9
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d David Dunham (KinetX, Inc.), Victor Slabinski (U.S. Naval Observatory) (2011). "BAAS Obituary".
- Jump up ^ T. S. Baskett (1963). "U.S. Naval Observatory Report". Astronomical Journal 68 (9): 672, 674. Bibcode:1963AJ.....68..649M. doi:10.1086/109195.
- Jump up ^ Gart Westerhout, Charles K. Roberts (1984). "U.S. Naval Observatory Report". Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society 17: 457. Bibcode:1985BAAS...17..457.
- Jump up ^ ""Meta" Researcher Champions New Funding Sources for Independent Science". APS News 5 (4). April 1996.
- Jump up ^ USNO Staff Directory for Nautical Almanac Office, December 1976
- Jump up ^ Colin Keay (September 1993). "Another Revolution in Physics. Maybe?". Australian & New Zealand Physicist 30 (9): 230.
- Jump up ^ van Flandern, T. C. (1979). "Gravitation and the expansion of the Earth". Nature 278 (5707): 821. Bibcode:1979Natur.278..821V. doi:10.1038/278821a0.
- Jump up ^ USNO Staff Directory for Nautical Almanac Office, November 1977
- Jump up ^ Gonzo Science, Jim Richardson, Alan Richardson, p. 62, 2004.
- Jump up ^ "Citation for 52266". Minor Planet Circulars (65123).
- Jump up ^ "Award winners". Gravity Research Foundation.
- Jump up ^ Tom Van Flandern (1974). "A Determination of the Rate of Change of G".
- Jump up ^ Clifford Will (1993). Was Einstein Right?: putting general relativity to the test (2 ed.). Basic Books. p. 175-. ISBN 0-465-09086-9.
- Jump up ^ Dark Matter, Missing Planets, New Comets, Van Flandern 1993.
- Jump up ^ Satellite of Minor Planet 532 Herculina Discovered During Occultation. David W. Dunham, The Minor Planet Bulletin, Volume 6, p.13–14 (December 1978)
- Jump up ^ Van Flandern, T. C., Tedesco, E. F. & Binzel, R. P. in Asteroids (ed. Gehrels, T.) 443–465 (Univ. Ariz. Press, Tucson, 1979).
- Jump up ^ Storrs, Alex Weiss; Zellner; Burleson; Sichitiu; Wells; Kowal; Tholen (1999). "Imaging observations of asteroids with Hubble Space Telescope". Icarus 137 (2): 260–268. Bibcode:1999Icar..137..260S. doi:10.1006/icar.1999.6047.
- Jump up ^ Fliegel, Henry; Thomas C. Van Flanderen (October 1968). "Letters to the editor: a machine algorithm for processing calendar dates". ACM. p. 657. doi:10.1145/364096.364097. Retrieved 2013-06-28.
- Jump up ^ Van Flandern, T. C. and Pulkkinen, K. F. (1979). "Low-Precision Formulae for Planetary Positions". Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 41 (3): 391–411.
- Jump up ^ "Dark Matter, Missing Planets, New Comets", Van Flandern (1993)
- Jump up ^ See the Wikipedia article on Phaeton (hypothetical planet).
- Jump up ^ [1] According to Van Flandern's article on the Exploded Planet Hypothesis "The third planetary explosion mechanism relies on one other hypothesis not yet widely accepted, but holds out the potential for an indefinitely large reservoir of energy for exploding even massive planets and stars. If gravitational fields are continually regenerated, as in LeSage particle models of gravity [xvi], then all masses are continually absorbing energy from this universal flux."
- Jump up ^ Jeffery D. Kooistra (July–August 1999). "Conference on Future Energy". Infinite Energy Magazine (26). An editor gave a summary of Van Flandern's talk at the Infinite Energy conference and wrote "Van Flandern gave a talk entitled 'On a Complete Theory of Gravity and Free Energy'. For the free energy enthusiast, the implications of gravity being particulate and perhaps blockable are obvious. Block or deflect the c-gravitons raining down from the sky and up you go into space. Turn off the blocking shield and recover the energy you've gained, for free, as you fall back to Earth."
- Jump up ^ "Dr. Thomas Van Flandern – MUFON-LA (1 of 1)". youtube.
- Jump up ^ Van Flandern, T (1998). "The speed of gravity ? What the experiments say". Physics Letters A 250 (1–3): 1. Bibcode:1998PhLA..250....1V. doi:10.1016/S0375-9601(98)00650-1.
- Jump up ^ Marsh, Gerald E; Nissim-Sabat, Charles (1999). "Comment on "The speed of gravity"". Physics Letters A 262 (2–3): 257. Bibcode:1999PhLA..262..257M. doi:10.1016/S0375-9601(99)00675-1.
- Jump up ^ Carlip, S (2000). "Aberration and the Speed of Gravity". Phys. Lett. A 267 (2–3): 81–87. arXiv:gr-qc/9909087. Bibcode:2000PhLA..267...81C. doi:10.1016/S0375-9601(00)00101-8.
- Jump up ^ "Proof that the Cydonia Face on Mars is Artificial". Metaresearch.org.
- Jump up ^ Tom Van Flandern (1993). Dark Matter, Missing Planets and New Comets: Paradoxes Resolved, Origins Illuminated. chapter 24. New Evidence for Artificiality at Cydonia on Mars: North Atlantic Books. ISBN 978-1-55643-268-2.
- Jump up ^ "Mysterious Mars". youtube.
- Jump up ^ Britt, R.R. (March 18, 2004). "Scientist attacks alien claims on Mars". CNN. Retrieved October 12, 2007.
- Jump up ^ "Astronomical Pseudo-Science: A Skeptic's Resource List". Astronomical Society of the Pacific.
- Jump up ^ "The Face on Mars, Viking Project". NASA website. Retrieved April 26, 2007.
- Jump up ^ The Top 30 Problems With the Big Bang, Van Flandern's web article explaining his objections to big bang cosmology.
- Jump up ^ http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20080911/NEWS/809110302
- Jump up ^ Crisis in cosmology continues with conference of big-bang dissidents, John Hartnett
- Jump up ^ Big Bang Wikipedia article on the Big Bang theory.
External links
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| Wikisource has original works written by or about: |
- Official website
- American Astronomical Society obituary
- Meta Research, Inc., GuideStar
- Google Scholar on Tom Van Flandern
- Cincinnati.com article on Project Moonwatch historical marker
- Sequim Gazette article on Van Flandern
- Xavier University article on Project Moonwatch historical marker
- The Ohio Historical Society article on Cincinnati Astronomical Society and Project Moonwatch
- Xavier University article about Project Moonwatch team members
- Niels Bohr Library & Archives oral history transcript of Van Flandern and Slabinski