Path: ...!eternal-september.org!feeder3.eternal-september.org!news.gegeweb.eu!gegeweb.org!usenet-fr.net!proxad.net!feeder1-2.proxad.net!cleanfeed4-a.proxad.net!nnrp3-2.free.fr!not-for-mail Newsgroups: sci.physics.relativity Subject: Re: The failure of the unified field theory means general relativity fails. From: nospam@de-ster.demon.nl (J. J. Lodder) Reply-To: jjlxa31@xs4all.nl (J. J. Lodder) Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2024 09:24:58 +0200 References: <693b1f71c994c268d60983eb81fc6aaa@www.novabbs.com> <17db55a7e5709ab7$1933$480477$c2365abb@news.newsdemon.com> <9283a49bcc091b1f621ebd566d650a38@www.novabbs.com> <6677e170$0$11724$426a74cc@news.free.fr> Organization: De Ster Mail-Copies-To: nobody User-Agent: MacSOUP/2.8.5 (ea919cf118) (Mac OS 10.12.6) Lines: 57 Message-ID: <667bc249$0$11713$426a74cc@news.free.fr> NNTP-Posting-Date: 26 Jun 2024 09:24:57 CEST NNTP-Posting-Host: 213.10.137.58 X-Trace: 1719386697 news-2.free.fr 11713 213.10.137.58:64826 X-Complaints-To: abuse@proxad.net Bytes: 3439 Ross Finlayson wrote: > On 06/24/2024 11:49 PM, Thomas Heger wrote: > > Am Dienstag000025, 25.06.2024 um 05:57 schrieb Tom Roberts: > > > >>>> Nope. YOU have imposed specific units onto the formula/equation. The > >>>> equation itself does not impose any particular units on its variables > >>>> and constants [@], it merely requires that they be self-consistent. > >>>> > >>>> [@] There are many systems of units in common use. You > >>>> seem to think there is only one. > >>> > >>> A forteriori, any result that depends on any particular choice > >>> of units (or dimensions) is unphysical. > >> > >> Yes, of course. Good point. Similarly, any result that depends on > >> choice of coordinates is unphysical. > >> > > > > Not quite... > > > > Because velocity is 'relative' (relative in respect to what you regard > > as 'stationary'), kinetic energy is frame dependent. > > > > Since the used coordinate system defines 'stationary', you need a > > coordinate system for kinetic energy and that for practically everything > > else. > > > > TH > > When I hear "unphysical" I think it means "in the mathematical > representation and having no attachment to the physical representation, > in the system of units of the dimensional analysis in the > geometric setting". > > The dimensional analysis and attachment to geometry and > arithmetic usually is about the only "physical" there is. Dimensional analysis has nothing to do with physics. Dimensions are man-made conventions. Nothing would change if the whole concept had never been invented. > (Geometry and arithmetic and the objects of analysis > and so on.) > > Things like "negative time" and "anti-deSitter space" are > unphysical, as are the non-real parts of complex analysis, > usually, though for example if you consider the Cartanian > as essentially different from the Gaussian-Eulerian, > complex analysis, then the Majorana spinor makes an > example of a detectable observable, though, one might > aver that that's its real part, in the hypercomplex. Well, yes, but that is another meaning of 'unphysical, Jan