Hmm, static fields are not “radiated” by charges or masses, they basically are charges or masses. That’s why you cannot tell a tiny wormhole with a field threaded through it from a dipole, without looking closely down the throat.
I don’t think the analogy with a pattern is a good one. Consider one electric force line going between the charge and infinity. As you move the charge, so does the line. But its two ends are firmly fixed at the charge and the infinity correspondingly. As the charge goes through the wormhole, this line is still “attached” to the infinity outside the throat, as it cannot just suddenly discontinuously jump between the two asymptotic regions. As a result, the electric field line gets “caught” in the topology, still going back through the entrance and out even after the charge generating it completely traversed the wormhole.
It is also interesting to consider what happens when a charged particle traverses
a wormhole. (Of course, this “pointlike” charge might actually be one mouth of a
smaller wormhole.) Suppose that, initially, the mouths of the wormhole are uncharged
(no electric flux is trapped in the wormhole). By following the electric field lines, we
see that after an object with electric charge Q traverses the wormhole, the mouth
where it entered the wormhole carries charge Q, and the mouth where it exited
carries charge −Q. Thus, an electric charge that passes through a wormhole transfers
charge to the wormhole mouths.
Static fields sure ACT like they’re radiated by charges - same causal structure (see my recent post about causality and static fields), same 1/r^2. And of course we always think of the radiative fields as being radiated by charges. So that covers both cases. Based on what actual lines of reasoning do we not consider static fields to be radiated by charges?
With your example, why do we say the field lines are attached? It certainly acts like it’s attached whenever there are no wormholes around and as long as charge is conserved, that’s for sure. But that might be a cause or it might be an effect. And when you dicky around with the assumptions connecting them, it may or may not end up being on the fundamental side of things.
Like… forget wormholes for a moment. Let’s go to a counterfactual—imagine there was a weak interaction that violated conservation of charge. Assuming it actually happened, against all expectations, what do you think the electrical field would look like? If you trace it causally, what you see is unusual but you have no trouble—it’s only in the spacelike cuts that it looks ugly. And physics really really doesn’t act like it’s implemented on spacelike cuts.
Static fields sure ACT like they’re radiated by charges
I likely disagree with that, depending on your meaning of “radiated”. I’d say they are “attached” to charges, acausally (i.e. not respecting the light cone). That’s what the static field approximation is all about.
Then there is the quasi-static case, where you neglect the radiation. The java applet I linked shows what happens there: the disturbance in the static field due to acceleration of charges propagates at the speed of light.
Hmm, static fields are not “radiated” by charges or masses, they basically are charges or masses. That’s why you cannot tell a tiny wormhole with a field threaded through it from a dipole, without looking closely down the throat.
I don’t think the analogy with a pattern is a good one. Consider one electric force line going between the charge and infinity. As you move the charge, so does the line. But its two ends are firmly fixed at the charge and the infinity correspondingly. As the charge goes through the wormhole, this line is still “attached” to the infinity outside the throat, as it cannot just suddenly discontinuously jump between the two asymptotic regions. As a result, the electric field line gets “caught” in the topology, still going back through the entrance and out even after the charge generating it completely traversed the wormhole.
Here is a quote from an old paper http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9308044:
Static fields sure ACT like they’re radiated by charges - same causal structure (see my recent post about causality and static fields), same 1/r^2. And of course we always think of the radiative fields as being radiated by charges. So that covers both cases. Based on what actual lines of reasoning do we not consider static fields to be radiated by charges?
With your example, why do we say the field lines are attached? It certainly acts like it’s attached whenever there are no wormholes around and as long as charge is conserved, that’s for sure. But that might be a cause or it might be an effect. And when you dicky around with the assumptions connecting them, it may or may not end up being on the fundamental side of things.
Like… forget wormholes for a moment. Let’s go to a counterfactual—imagine there was a weak interaction that violated conservation of charge. Assuming it actually happened, against all expectations, what do you think the electrical field would look like? If you trace it causally, what you see is unusual but you have no trouble—it’s only in the spacelike cuts that it looks ugly. And physics really really doesn’t act like it’s implemented on spacelike cuts.
I likely disagree with that, depending on your meaning of “radiated”. I’d say they are “attached” to charges, acausally (i.e. not respecting the light cone). That’s what the static field approximation is all about.
Then there is the quasi-static case, where you neglect the radiation. The java applet I linked shows what happens there: the disturbance in the static field due to acceleration of charges propagates at the speed of light.
I’ll think more about your other arguments.