RedShiftam Posted January 10, 2019 Posted January 10, 2019 (edited) Let’s we imagine a particle that is in a box and it hits the walls of the box with a certain frequency. Let's say that the energy of the box comes from the frequency with which the particle hits the walls. If we start to shrink, the box frequency will become bigger and the energy of the box will rise. But the smaller the box, the better we will know where the particle is, from where it follows that the uncertainty in momentum is going to get bigger. On the other hand, if we have a test object close enough to the box, this object will experience a greater gravitational pull from the box. I made a derivation using the Newtonian laws of gravity and I got this formula. So where am wrong? Edited January 10, 2019 by RedShiftam
swansont Posted January 10, 2019 Posted January 10, 2019 I do not see where your original equation comes from. You say you derived it — let's see the derivation.
studiot Posted January 10, 2019 Posted January 10, 2019 (edited) 1 hour ago, RedShiftam said: Let’s we imagine a particle that is in a box and it hits the walls of the box with a certain frequency. Let's say that the energy of the box comes from the frequency with which the particle hits the walls. If we start to shrink, the box frequency will become bigger and the energy of the box will rise. But the smaller the box, the better we will know where the particle is, from where it follows that the uncertainty in momentum is going to get bigger. On the other hand, if we have a test object close enough to the box, this object will experience a greater gravitational pull from the box. I made a derivation using the Newtonian laws of gravity and I got this formula. So where am wrong? Quote .............................I made a derivation using the Newtonian laws of gravity ........................So where am wrong? Well for a start you require (two or more) masses to apply newton's law of gravity. You only have one. Do you realise the in the case of "The particle in a box", you not only have a particle you also have a potential field in that box ? Edited January 10, 2019 by studiot
RedShiftam Posted January 10, 2019 Author Posted January 10, 2019 1 hour ago, studiot said: Well for a start you require (two or more) masses to apply newton's law of gravity. In this case I do not need two or more objects! In this formula I use frequency as a source of energy. Derivation is logical. This formula It's just the end result. Apparently I had to put the whole line. I'm sorry fo that! The walls of the box may be visualised as regions of space with an infinitely large potential energy. Conversely, the interior of the box has a constant, zero potential energy.This means that no forces act upon the particle inside the box and it can move freely in that region.
studiot Posted January 10, 2019 Posted January 10, 2019 (edited) 35 minutes ago, RedShiftam said: In this case I do not need two or more objects! In this formula I use frequency as a source of energy. Derivation is logical. This formula It's just the end result. Apparently I had to put the whole line. I'm sorry fo that! The walls of the box may be visualised as regions of space with an infinitely large potential energy. Conversely, the interior of the box has a constant, zero potential energy.This means that no forces act upon the particle inside the box and it can move freely in that region. You have included G in your expression. What does this mean? Edit Gosh, you have been watching this for 15 minutes without reply. I am simply asking you to identify all the symbols in your expressions. Why is that so difficult? Edited January 10, 2019 by studiot
swansont Posted January 10, 2019 Posted January 10, 2019 47 minutes ago, RedShiftam said: Derivation is logical. Not to me. I don't get the right units when I analyze your formula. I don't see how you'd get the cube of the momentum uncertainty. I don't know how you can justify that the energy comes from the frequency of the ball hitting the walls. The frequency would depend on the speed and the size of the box. I can change the frequency without changing the energy, when I make the box smaller.
Strange Posted January 10, 2019 Posted January 10, 2019 1 hour ago, RedShiftam said: I use frequency as a source of energy. How is frequency a source of energy? That is like saying the length is a source of energy. If anything, the frequency of the particle will be caused by energy. 1 hour ago, RedShiftam said: The walls of the box may be visualised as regions of space with an infinitely large potential energy. So a completely non-physical setup. 1 hour ago, RedShiftam said: This means that no forces act upon the particle inside the box and it can move freely in that region. Then why would its energy increase? Where is the energy coming from?
studiot Posted January 10, 2019 Posted January 10, 2019 (edited) Don't you find that conversation, when there's only one participant is rather like gravity when there's only one mass ? :) Edited January 10, 2019 by studiot
swansont Posted January 11, 2019 Posted January 11, 2019 Your equation for momentum is wrong. Did you mean to write that p = nhv (momentum of an ensemble of photons), and then for the frequency, write down 1/t? It doesn't work like that. Your equation for energy assumes a photon. Your equation for ∆F is not derived here; it looks like you just wrote it down.
studiot Posted January 11, 2019 Posted January 11, 2019 22 hours ago, RedShiftam said: In this case I do not need two or more objects! In this formula I use frequency as a source of energy. Derivation is logical. This formula It's just the end result. Apparently I had to put the whole line. I'm sorry fo that! The walls of the box may be visualised as regions of space with an infinitely large potential energy. Conversely, the interior of the box has a constant, zero potential energy.This means that no forces act upon the particle inside the box and it can move freely in that region. This is complete and utter rubbish. There are and can be no gravitational forces acting when there is only one mass. That is axiomatic. I ask again , what is G and where does it come from? Further this whole presentation is speculative at best.
RedShiftam Posted January 11, 2019 Author Posted January 11, 2019 (edited) Momentum of a photon is h/wavelength! L/n =wavelength (this n doesn't mean the number of a particles). So the formula is not wrong! 2 hours ago, swansont said: Your equation for momentum is wrong. Edited January 11, 2019 by RedShiftam
swansont Posted January 11, 2019 Posted January 11, 2019 9 minutes ago, RedShiftam said: Momentum of a photon is h/wavelength! L/n =wavelength (this n doesn't mean the number of a particles). So the formula is not wrong! How do you get nh/t from that? And where did you specify photons? You said "particles" The basic failing here for light is that when you squeeze the cavity down, the energy will not change. You will just have an unsupported mode for the light, and the photon will get absorbed, or tunnel out of the box.
studiot Posted January 11, 2019 Posted January 11, 2019 2 hours ago, studiot said: There are and can be no gravitational forces acting when there is only one mass. That is axiomatic. I ask again , what is G and where does it come from? I am still waiting for an answer to my question about your introduction of gravity and the symbol G. Please reply in accordance with the rules here.
RedShiftam Posted January 12, 2019 Author Posted January 12, 2019 G is the gravitational constant. I think is clear that. Maybe i don't understand your question. You can see above and see from where it comes. 17 hours ago, swansont said: And where did you specify photons? You said "particles" Photons are also a type of elementary particle.
Strange Posted January 12, 2019 Posted January 12, 2019 On 1/10/2019 at 2:00 PM, RedShiftam said: Let's say that the energy of the box comes from the frequency with which the particle hits the walls. You still haven't explained what the source of this energy is. Are you confusing the frequency of the photon (which is proportional to energy) and the frequency with which it interacts (which isn't)?
swansont Posted January 12, 2019 Posted January 12, 2019 3 hours ago, RedShiftam said: Photons are also a type of elementary particle. Photons are one type of particle, but they are not typical. Most particles have mass. If you meant photons, you need to say that. Your momentum equation is still wrong, you do not show where the force equation comes from, and the idea won't work. A photon reflecting in a cavity will not change its energy when you shrink it. You just lose the photon.
RedShiftam Posted January 12, 2019 Author Posted January 12, 2019 3 hours ago, Strange said: Are you confusing the frequency of the photon (which is proportional to energy) and the frequency with which it interacts (which isn't)? Now, as you say it, I think you are right that I confused them. 20 minutes ago, swansont said: Your momentum equation is still wrong I don't know what you mean by that? This is the momentum formula h/wavelength=p!
Q-reeus Posted January 12, 2019 Posted January 12, 2019 (edited) 1 hour ago, swansont said: Photons are one type of particle, but they are not typical. Most particles have mass. If you meant photons, you need to say that. Your momentum equation is still wrong, you do not show where the force equation comes from, and the idea won't work. A photon reflecting in a cavity will not change its energy when you shrink it. You just lose the photon. I just noticed this post from a casual random read. It's wrong. Squeezing down a cavity with implicitly notionally perfectly reflecting walls means work is being done against radiation pressure that naturally resists any shrinkage. Adiabatic process. This in turn MUST result in an increase in photon energy - if net system conservation of energy is to be maintained. The resolution fairly obviously involves that shrinkage requires an initial inward acceleration of wall motions. Relative wall-photon momentum exchange therefore increases over time and that implies an increase in (center-of-system-energy) photon frequency. Invoking photon absorption as 'resolution' is an appeal to material properties (finite conductivity) which cannot be fundamental to the basic physics involved. [PS: But there is still the need to explain photon energy increase during a more-or-less constant inward wall speed phase. One cannot appeal to an increase in per-impact bullet-like photon-wall momentum exchange. Only to a change in the overall cavity mode pattern/field intensity. Which would be particularly evident if the notional photon wavelength is comparable to cavity size. Especially if it gets down to the limit of a fundamental cavity mode only being present, then the picture basically reduces to one of field/wall-current coupling.] [Even further, it will all depend on precisely HOW the cavity is shrunk for a given mode pattern. For instance, shrinkage along only the E field axis of a rectangular cavity in fundamental TE_010 mode will involve negative work being done on the cavity hence a reduction in field energy. Whereas shrinkage only normal to that axis (against magnetic outward pressure) increases internal field energy.] Edited January 12, 2019 by Q-reeus
RedShiftam Posted January 12, 2019 Author Posted January 12, 2019 (edited) My original thought was if I start to constrain a particle in less and less space, is it that going to change the gravitational force of that particle, which is acting on a object? So that more uncertainty in momentum will correspond to more G-force. Apparently my thought experiment is not well constructed! Edited January 12, 2019 by RedShiftam
swansont Posted January 12, 2019 Posted January 12, 2019 8 hours ago, Q-reeus said: I just noticed this post from a casual random read. It's wrong. Squeezing down a cavity with implicitly notionally perfectly reflecting walls means work is being done against radiation pressure that naturally resists any shrinkage. Adiabatic process. This in turn MUST result in an increase in photon energy - if net system conservation of energy is to be maintained. The resolution fairly obviously involves that shrinkage requires an initial inward acceleration of wall motions. Relative wall-photon momentum exchange therefore increases over time and that implies an increase in (center-of-system-energy) photon frequency. Invoking photon absorption as 'resolution' is an appeal to material properties (finite conductivity) which cannot be fundamental to the basic physics involved. Great. Show me an experiment where this happens. The issue, I suspect, is that this ideal system is not physically possible, so you can’t validly make any predictions based on it. Normally, the “impossible” parts of the assumptions don’t matter (e.g. a frictionless surface). But I need someone to show me a mechanism where one does work and changes the energy of a photon, in the manner described here. (this is reminiscent of assuming an infinitely rigid rod. An innocuous-seeming assumption, but one which violates relativity. Here it’s perfect reflectivity) 8 hours ago, RedShiftam said: I don't know what you mean by that? This is the momentum formula h/wavelength=p! Thevequation you gave is nh/t
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