>sound has harmonics
>light has harmonics
Does mass have harmonics?
How would we tell?
>sound has harmonics
>light has harmonics
Does mass have harmonics?
How would we tell?
mass is not a wave
what if its lava.
my BBC has harmonics inside your wife
Does gravity have harmonics?
>Does mass have harmonics?
yes.
>youtube.com
engineers have to design around the natural frequency of a structure. next time you get on a plane, pay attention to the moment when the plane shudders slightly on take off. thats the engines hitting the resonance frequency of the plane and then blowing straight through it by ramping up.
interesting question. i'm not sure about the answer.
if i remember correctly, it was claimed a while ago that gravity waves were detected experimentally. but harmonics are typically thought of as wave solutions with fixed boundary conditions. think of a guitar string fixed at both ends. i don't know whether it's possible to have boundary conditions like this for gravitational waves.
This is the same phonomenon that causes sound to have harmonics. Its not what im asking.
.>fixed boundary conditions
light doesn't have fixed boundry conditions
this probably won't satisfy you but w/e
en.wikipedia.org
>sound
is vibrating mass...
i think you are overcomplicating this.