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"Quantum Gravity in Gamma Ray Bursts: Still Nothing"

18 Comments -

1 – 18 of 18
Blogger Uncle Al said...

Assume photon vacuum symmetry (QM) is identically matter vacuum symmetry (GR). Axiomatic systems cannot self-falsify. Rigorous derivation is then errorless and unphysical. Challenge spacetime geometry with the orthogonal geometries of enantiomorphic self-similar atomic mass distributions. Geometric Eötvös experiments demonstrate vacuum symmetry, photons vs. matter, trace diverges. GR has fermion nightmares - and well it should.

1:03 PM, September 17, 2013

Blogger Zephir said...

In AWT the Lorentz symmetry breaking really happens inside of gamma ray bursts, because the more energetic photons are heavier and they're traveling slower. But the same effect leads the less massive photons into revolving of heavier photons around Kepler orbits - so that whole group of photon reaches the Earth in a same moment - despite each photon travels along different path with different speed.

7:27 AM, September 18, 2013

Blogger Robert Nemiroff said...

The main "millisecond / GeV" result in the Nemiroff et al. paper is based on three separate groups of GeV+ photons, each separated by (about) a millisecond. The first group, which is the most important as it has the highest energy photon, has three photons in it, not two. Yes, it is possible that the distribution of these seven high energy GRB 090510 photons -- or the three in the main group -- is just lucky bunching from a longer time-scale parent distribution. Let's say, though, that the bunching of "the three" photons really occurs at the distant source. Seems favored, statistically. An interesting attribute is that the highest energy photon comes in the MIDDLE of the three. Wow! Then even the temporal width of this fleeting bunch is likely a source effect and not energy-dependent dispersion -- and therefore not quantum gravity dispersion. Then QG dispersion, if it exists, is confined to scales below 1/500 of the Planck length.

10:46 AM, September 18, 2013

Blogger Uncle Al said...

I got yer orbit riiight heeere. It's a töricht not a torus.

11:14 AM, September 18, 2013

Blogger Eric said...

Bee, have you considered that there is a much more prosaic example of highly energized photons acting differently? Perhaps neutrinos are just an example of single or multi photons that have acquired mass and slowed down slightly.

I always think that an encyclopedic description of nature where all observables are neatly categorized but not understood is the fertile ground from which physical relationships are later understood. Maybe neutrinos are what you are really thinking about.

1:42 PM, September 18, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Robert: Thanks for chiming in.

Eric: Neutrinos are fermions. Photons not.

1:06 AM, September 19, 2013

Blogger Eric said...

"Eric: Neutrinos are fermions. Photons not."

Exactly. What do think the process of turning bosons into fermions consists of? It's displaced energy during acceleration.

If it turned out that gamma ray photons actually changed speed and/ or attained mass what do you think that change would consist of? It would be the equivalent of turning a boson in a fermion.

1:16 AM, September 19, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Eric: Look, make that verbal explanation mathematically exact, publish it, and then we can talk again.

1:34 AM, September 19, 2013

Blogger Eric said...

Bee, I know this might be hard to accept but I've learned in this world things aren't really fair. I just put it out there on these comments because some smart person deserves to know about it minus all the math that wouldn't really add to the idea. If you don't like hearing really good ideas because they aren't published in the archive or because my name doesn't have a credential after it then I consider that your loss.

But I actually believe the real reason you said what you just said is that you would then never have to suffer the embarrassment in future of crediting me if you ever decided to use my logic.

Actually I never even thought of trying to get official credit for it. But it does strike me as small minded, and not fooling too many people either, to go out of your way to act unimpressed. It's not fooling me and probably not anyone else either.

1:56 AM, September 19, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Eric,

Look, you've previously falsely accused me of allegednly 'stealing' your great ideas and I was hoping you learned something from that.

'Great ideas' come in dozens. Maybe the neutrino is a photon or the other way round or maybe a graviton is two electrons, or maybe spacetime is fractal or maybe there's a universe inside every quark or maybe Planck's constant is not actually constant, or maybe Feynman diagrams are knots and braids or maybe black holes are elementary particles, and so on and so forth. I am pretty damned sure that for every single one of these 'ideas' you'll find a hundred people who've had them, and most of them probably think they're very creative and understand a lot about physics. These are ideas, Eric, that are born out of the social context you swim in. They're hybrids of concepts that already exists, which is the easiest and most common way to be creative. It's also the cheapest way. It's not a bad way and often successful. But success doesn't come from having an idea. Success comes from making it work.

Rest assured, I have zero interest in stealing your idea, thank you. And if you don't want me, or anybody else to 'steal' them, then why are you dumping them (off topic) on my blog to begin with? Best,

B.

4:18 AM, September 19, 2013

Blogger Uncle Al said...

"minus all the math that wouldn't really add to the idea." Science is theory (math) and observation (becomes math). Alain Connes' non-commutative algebra; GR appears. Thermodynamics plus the Beckenstein bound, GR appears. Einstein-Cartan-Kibble-Sciama gravitation is GR’s superset. Test the increment: "Opposite shoes" violate the Equivalence Principle.

Eight years grinding CHI with mathematician Michel Petitjean for molecules then crystal lattices. y = mx + b models intensely complex CHI, with mathematician Penelope Smith. Three years with crystallographer John Osborn on space groups. Caltech chair parade mining crystal structure databases. It's a hobby.

A vast gulp of superlative theory contradicts observation. Science tolerates error but not folly, even for a hobby. Then, peer review.

Symmetry: Culture and Science 19(4) 233-247; 307-316 (2008)
Bull. Am. Phys. Soc. 49(2) 54 (2004)



12:03 PM, September 19, 2013

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6:07 PM, September 19, 2013

Blogger Eric said...

Bee, you missed my point entirely. We all move on and learn from mistakes, including me. What I was saying, which you obviously didn't get, is that I like the idea of freely putting out good ideas on the net. I accept no "official" credit. Not even a little. To me that's what this stuff is for. That's why I've never promoted or characterized my ideas within some official theoretical framework. For instance Aether theory or Discreet blah blah.

What I expect in return for no expectation of credit is the simple engagement with a good idea instead of pathological movement away from it because of the form the idea comes in and the source of the idea.

It requires nothing more than the simple admission that it might be a good idea to think about things that way. And like I said, that admission would not in any way ever make me think you owed me any kind of credit whatsoever in later publication. I understand how this works. What I'm really talking about is just acting honestly within the usual social contract between people. Your going back to my response from before is outdated. I've movee on.

6:09 PM, September 19, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Eric,

Okay, I'm sorry for the misunderstanding and apologize. Let me just say that I don't think it's a good idea, and I have no intention to spend time thinking about it. I would also appreciate if you could keep your comments on-topic. Topic of this post are the new constraints on spectral dispersion in gamma ray bursts, just as a reminder. Best,

B.

3:48 AM, September 20, 2013

OpenID johnduffieldblog said...

I feel this work is more lose-lose than win-win actually. I also feel that I should look closely at the papers, and if do I feel like saying something, maybe a public blog isn't the best place for it.

8:18 AM, September 20, 2013

Blogger Phillip Helbig said...

Don't worry about people stealing your ideas. If your ideas are any good, you'll have to ram them down people's throats.
---Howard Aiken

11:15 AM, September 20, 2013

Blogger Robert L. Oldershaw said...


Sometimes it's best to let nature do the persuading.

12:01 PM, September 20, 2013

Blogger The Tunneller said...

Hie Volks

I have been working on quantization of spacetime using Dirac's techniques and "discovered" the graviton. This is a promising approach to quantum gravity. You can download my paper for free at www.scirp.org/journal/ijaa and discuss whether it is an approach worthy of further pursuit. The paper is called Nexus: A Quantum Theory of Spacetime Gravity and the Quantum Vacuum.

2:41 AM, September 24, 2013

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