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0 votes
0 answers
42 views

Radiation energy and momentum relation [duplicate]

Why is $\rho = 3p$ for radiation? What is the intuition behind this? If we had only 2 spatial dimentions, would it be $\rho = 2p$? (I came across this relation while studying the state of the universe,...
Nayeem1's user avatar
  • 1,141
2 votes
2 answers
75 views

If a weak light source is attached to a string, and someone swing this light source in circle. It seems that this light source is brighter. Yes or no

It may be truly a question of life and death. You know those glow sticks. As a sailor it is a good idea to carry one on our lifevest. Falling into the sea, those glow stick make a light source that ...
Pierre magnard's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
171 views

Huygens Principle and the bending of light

In the last section of Einstein's paper of general relativity (1916), he deduced the curvature of light when passing massive objects. It says from Huygens' principle, the light rays must suffer a ...
user353731's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
210 views

Does the index of refraction of the sun's corona and solar wind contribute to the bending of light

It's not hard to imagine that the sun's corona and surrounding solar winds have an optical density that can affect the index of refraction near the surface of the sun and bend light in these regions. ...
Stevan V. Saban's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
66 views

Michelson-Morley interferometer in free fall

We suppose that we have a Michelson-Morley interferometer in free fall, will there be no interference: the round trip time in both arms of the interferometer is the same?
The Tiler's user avatar
  • 1,360
8 votes
2 answers
336 views

Why a gravitational lense makes multiple distinct pictures of a distant object rather than making a symmetric ring?

I cannot imagine how a group of galaxies may produce pictures of a distant object on a ring-like region that is not symmetric. Why there are empty parts of that ring where there are no pictures of the ...
Janko Bradvica's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
35 views

Plausibillity of using a black hole as a telescope?

I recently learned about the proposed FOCAL telescope, which would use the Sun's gravity as a lens to observe exoplanets (or whatever it's aimed at) with incredibly high resolution. Obviously, the Sun ...
Leif Fitzsimmons Frey's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
282 views

Do gravitational lenses act as prisms?

Light creates gravity, and the greater the light's frequency, the greater this gravitational effect is. It stands to reason then that light of different colors would react slightly differently to ...
Derek Seabrooke's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
76 views

Transformation of the frequency of a photon after an infinitesimal coordinate transformation

I am having trouble understanding a calculation done by V. Mukhanov in his book "Physical Foundations of Cosmology". In the beginning of the chapter 9, the following arguments are stated: ...
cero's user avatar
  • 350
2 votes
0 answers
63 views

Does gravitation (or acceleration) make an observer see squeezed light and squeezed matter?

I read at the end of this question that Matta wrote: "If I put a quantum field on a spacetime and boost to an accelerating reference frame then the field modes undergo squeezing which is a ...
Naima's user avatar
  • 678
3 votes
2 answers
77 views

When gravity bends light, does the light still propagate orthogonally to its $\vec E$ and $\vec B$ fields?

An ordinary photon travels perpendicularly to the direction of its oscillating E & B vector fields (i.e. $\vec{v} \propto \vec{E} \times \vec{B}$). Let's say $\vec{E}$ is oscillating "in-out" of ...
Sean49's user avatar
  • 945
3 votes
2 answers
2k views

Why do we know that light must follow a geodesic?

THE CONTEXT: Some context to my question: Einstein once posed the thought experiment of a man falling inside a closed box. Just before the box was dropped, a photon was fired horizontally moving from ...
Rory Cornish's user avatar
  • 1,087
1 vote
1 answer
96 views

Physical Analogs of General relativity and optics

My Prof told me today there is a 1-1 correspondence between particles in a curved space time, and optics problems in various indices of refraction, extending even as far as black holes. Does anyone ...
1 vote
1 answer
42 views

Direct observation of Gravitational Waves via increased resolution

First, congrats to the event horizon team for the first photograph of a black hole. Not to downplay the significance of the photo, but it is a bit blurry. Still, it got me thinking. One might expect ...
Ba'lroc Demos's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
62 views

Fermat principle [closed]

According to Fermat's principle, the actual path taken by a light ray in space locally minimizes the "optical length". It is possible to use the optical length (for some given function n) to defined ...
Amit Jha's user avatar

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