Does this explain what generates gravity?

Bonsai, first to address your Telescope question, I would hold fire.

Study the mattter before definite decisions.

Are you really trying to compete with the 4 x 8.2m Very Large Telescope in the high Atacama Desert of Chile?

Very Large Space Telescope Chile.jpg


THAT'S my idea of a proper Telescope!

Mine own results have been more about effort against adversity than anything else:

DSCN0749.JPG


4 planets in one shot is not bad!

Naturally I am more interested in the, IMO, absolutely correct Standard Model of Physics:

The Standard Model of Particle Physics.png


Built upon the Rock of Amelie Noether's ideas about Symmetry.

With every Symmetry comes a Conservation Law.

However, even I admit to difficulties with the Neutral Kaon.

https://www.quantamagazine.org/a-new-kind-of-symmetry-shakes-up-physics-20230418/

My current efforts in reconciling the Euler Zeta (2) function with Pure Geometry:

https://www.quantamagazine.org/two-students-unravel-a-widely-believed-math-conjecture-20230810/

I can only hope this is not one of those Mathematical Dead Ends:

Integral Apollonian Circle Packing.png


Riemann  or Euler Zeta(2).png


One can only hope for that Kavli Prize in 2024!

https://www.kavliprize.org/prizes/astrophysics/2010

I am, after all, too old for a Fields Medal.
 
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I didn't understand a "bit" of it. 😀

Only a mathematician could conjure up an infinite number of infinities!

Hilbert's Infinite Hotel my young protege!

David Hilbert.png


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Hilbert

"Nobody shall expel us from the (Infinite) Paradise that Cantor created!"

Generally considered an extremely competent Mathematician from the Gottingen school.

Actually solved General Relativity before our own dear Albert Einstein. But only did it after attending a lecture by Einstein, who was struggling with the Mathematics of the Metric Tensor, therefore never claimed credit for it.

As he said, any young Mathematician at Gottingen would have seen it immediately!

In fact my own personal Mathematical Hero from Gottingen is Felix Klein:

Felix Klein.png


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felix_Klein

I read one of his books in Portsmouth University library, and I was stunned by his multidimensional ability.

Felix Klein Book.png


It was one of those "Why didn't I see this before" moments.

For us mere loudspeaker and signal and Information theory ground-dwellers there is little beyond the Hilbert Transform and Claude Shannon's work:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilbert_transform

See, the Truth of Life is staring you in the face.

DSCN1075.JPG


Tetrahedron Embedded in Cube.png

All is symmetry. But occasionally broken and perhaps irreversible. 😀
 
...what we see now is actually not what the universe is now.

Estimating the number of stars in the observable universe is made more difficult by the fact that the universe is expanding.

Light from galaxies that are ever further away continues to reach Earth for the first time, meaning that we are able to see more and more of the universe as time passes.

According to Encyclopedia Britannica: Given the constant expansion of the universe, the observable universe expands another light-year every Earth year.
 
Hilbert's Infinite Hotel my young protege!

I was referring to Cantor's tower of infinities. https://plus.maths.org/content/cantor-and-cohen-infinite-investigators-part-ii

Mathematicians have known for well over a century now that infinity isn’t just one thing, it is infinitely many. There is an unending tower of ever greater infinities stretching up all the way to… well, whatever you’d like to call it.

1694358006995.png


Bonsai's link made reference to German mathematician Georg Cantor who used diagonalization to prove that some infinities are larger than others.

He discovered that the “real” numbers (most with never-ending digits, like 3.14159…) outnumber “natural” numbers like 1, 2 and 3, even though there are infinitely many of both.
 
All fine and dandy..

BUT

Can we design a gravitron heterogeneous discordant audio system that uses orthogonal gravity to create audio waves?

You know.. the Gravityneous Wall of Sound?

Can we make virtual planar sources of audio waves.... virtual Magnepans that, when excited, also serve as portals through multi dimensions to parts far and away in our Universe? Just make sure to turn the stereo off when you walk around that part of the room!
 
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Is there something new since Cantor ?

Bonsai's link, to which I referred, may hold the answer to your question.

https://www.quantamagazine.org/alan-turing-and-the-power-of-negative-thinking-20230905/

Georg Cantor used diagonalization to prove that some infinities are larger than others in 1873.

Alan Turing adapted Cantor’s version of diagonalization to the theory of computation in 1936.

Computer scientists have since continued to explore diagonalization and its blind spots.

Turing’s diagonalization proof - the infinite list of possible algorithms - it's all above my pay grade! 🤓
 
Bonsai's link, to which I referred, may hold the answer to your question.

https://www.quantamagazine.org/alan-turing-and-the-power-of-negative-thinking-20230905/

Georg Cantor used diagonalization to prove that some infinities are larger than others in 1873.

Alan Turing adapted Cantor’s version of diagonalization to the theory of computation in 1936.

Computer scientists have since continued to explore diagonalization and its blind spots.

Turing’s diagonalization proof - the infinite list of possible algorithms - it's all above my pay grade! 🤓
Add Kurt Gödel in the use of diagonalization.
Do not miss how Albert Einstein helped K.G. to pass immigration in the US.
 
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I read that Teleparallel Gravity (TG) is making a comeback.

In TG, any entity with mass or energy twists up spacetime around it, and that twisting instructs other objects how to move.

TG attributes gravitation to the twisting of spacetime, while General Relativity (GR) attributes it to the curvature of spacetime.

The two approaches, one based on twistiness and the other based on curvature, are mathematically equivalent, but because Einstein developed the curvature-based language first, it's much more widely used.

A team of theoretical physicists has recently explored how TG would give black holes 'hair'.

1694381790498.png


Since the 'hair' would carry information about the black hole inside it, we'd be able to understand more about black holes without having to dive inside them!

Full story here: https://www.space.com/twisty-theory-of-gravity-says-information-can-escape-black-holes
 
If you ran a prime sieve for the age of the universe you still wouldn't have found all of them.
https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/sieve-of-eratosthenes/

Pure maths view of numerical infinity. 1 can always be added to what ever number you happen to choose. This leads to some rules in handling them - eg 1/n large tends to 0 etc. That one is ok. There are others.

LOL Interesting - take any prime and some number can always be added to it that will produce a none prime eg any smaller prime. 😉 The more you find the worse it gets.