Hello Gerard,
nice that you have found us. Welcome!
This forum has kindly set up a little physics asylum for us. The guys all speak English.
Because I'm currently playing around with piezos in another physics project, I had the idea that this could possibly be used for the measurements you need.
Charges are “built into” a piezo in such a way that they cannot be measured from the outside. However, if the piezo is subjected to pressure, the charge balance is disturbed and a voltage is measured.
If you mount a seismic mass on such a piezo, you can use it to measure forces. In your case, “F = m a”, i.e. acceleration or gravity. However, this is conventional and our “Plan B” if “Plan A” fails.
“Plan A” is more exciting! Gravity bends space (and time). Gravity changes the shape of the piezo. Since charges are absolute, the piezo voltage allows conclusions to be drawn about gravity at close range. In other words, a relativistic measurement!
The principle made a good impression in the screening. However, I cannot yet promise that this approach will lead to success. It is new territory. As far as I know, space curvature has never been measured in this way before.
So we have real development work to do. You as a theorist. And I as the experimenter. And anyone who finds us here (or is already here) is welcome to join in.
The goal is to achieve the measurement required in your paper:
https://vixra.org/abs/2502.0133
If we develop a new measurement method along the way, that would be perfect.
Best regards
Wolfgang
nice that you have found us. Welcome!
This forum has kindly set up a little physics asylum for us. The guys all speak English.
Because I'm currently playing around with piezos in another physics project, I had the idea that this could possibly be used for the measurements you need.
Charges are “built into” a piezo in such a way that they cannot be measured from the outside. However, if the piezo is subjected to pressure, the charge balance is disturbed and a voltage is measured.
If you mount a seismic mass on such a piezo, you can use it to measure forces. In your case, “F = m a”, i.e. acceleration or gravity. However, this is conventional and our “Plan B” if “Plan A” fails.
“Plan A” is more exciting! Gravity bends space (and time). Gravity changes the shape of the piezo. Since charges are absolute, the piezo voltage allows conclusions to be drawn about gravity at close range. In other words, a relativistic measurement!
The principle made a good impression in the screening. However, I cannot yet promise that this approach will lead to success. It is new territory. As far as I know, space curvature has never been measured in this way before.
So we have real development work to do. You as a theorist. And I as the experimenter. And anyone who finds us here (or is already here) is welcome to join in.
The goal is to achieve the measurement required in your paper:
https://vixra.org/abs/2502.0133
If we develop a new measurement method along the way, that would be perfect.
Best regards
Wolfgang