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by therein
3453 days ago
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Made me think of this. Maybe when they were doing the experiment, a gravitational wave happened and they somehow reflected it? > Thin superconducting films are predicted to be highly reflective mirrors for gravitational waves at microwave frequencies. The quantum mechanical non-localizability of the negatively charged Cooper pairs, which is protected from the localizing effect of decoherence by an energy gap, causes the pairs to undergo non-picturable, non-geodesic motion in the presence of a gravitational wave. https://arxiv.org/abs/0903.0661 |
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The issue is that distorting gravity has far more consequential effects due to generally relativity than just moving something. You are actually distorting time too.