Extraction of the Speed of Gravity (Light) from Gravity Observations Only

We show how one can measure the speed of gravity only using gravitational phenomena. Our approach offers several ways to measure the speed of gravity (light) and checks existing assumptions about light (gravity) in new types of experiments. The speed of light is included in several well-known gravitational formulas. However, if we can measure this speed from gravitational phenomena alone, then is it the speed of light or the speed of gravity we are measuring? We think it is more than a mere coincidence that they are the same. In addition, even if it is not possible to draw strong conclusions now, our formulations support the view that there is a link between electromagnetism and gravity. This paper also shows that all major gravity phenomena can be predicted from only performing two to three light observations. There is no need for knowledge of Newton’s gravitational constant G or the mass size to complete a series of major gravity predictions.


Introduction
In 1890, Maurice Lévy [1] suggested that the speed of gravity is equal to the speed of light. Poincaré [2] argued in 1904 that the speed of gravity could not be larger than the speed of light in vacuum. The speed of gravity in Einstein's general relativity theory [3] is assumed to be the same as the speed of light [4] [5].
Still, there exist a series of alternative gravity theories assuming that the speed of gravity is much greater than the speed of light, see, for example, [6] [7] [8] [9] for such models and discussion on them. To measure the speed of gravity is therefore of great importance to find out which theories can be ruled out and How to cite this paper: Haug, E.G. (2019) Extraction of the Speed of Gravity (Light) International Journal of Astronomy and Astrophysics which ones are worth exploring further [10] [11].
There have been several indirect detections of the speed of gravity in the past.
For example, [12], based on information from a rather complex set-up including quasar observations, concluded that the speed of gravity gw c was between 0.8 and 1.2 times the speed of light in vacuum. In more recent times, advanced experimental studies in relation to gravity waves claim to support the idea that the speed of gravity is in the ball park of the speed of light in a vacuum [13] [14] [15].
Clearly, these measurements give a very wide confidence interval for the speed of gravity, something to which we return later in this paper. These experiments are based on very complex set-ups and also, we would say, a complex set of assumptions.
This paper will show how we can extract the speed of gravity (light) from a series of simple gravity observations. The approach explained is much simpler conceptually and experimentally than gravity wave experiments. Our theory also supports the concept that gravity is moving at the speed of light, and the experiments suggested will likely give a very narrow confidence interval for the speed of gravity. It can be questioned if we are finding the speed of light or the speed of gravity in our method. Alternatively, they could perhaps be the same, if electromagnetism and gravity at a deeper level are connected, as they could be in a yet-to-be discovered unified theory. This will be discussed briefly in Section 6 of this paper.

Extracting the Speed of Gravity (Light)-The Simple Way
The speed of light is an input factor in several gravity formulas, such as the calculation for the Schwarzschild radius The formula can also be found from Newton's gravity theory [16] by setting the radius equal to the point where Newton's escape velocity is the speed of light 1 .
In addition, it can be derived from Einstein's theory of general relativity [3] in combination with the Schwarzschild metric [17] [18] because the escape velocity there supposedly is the same [19]. In 1784, Michell first calculated what radius would give an escape velocity equal to the speed of light, see [20]. He also hypothesized that the star would be dark. General relativity has a different interpretation and a much wider theory on these objects, which are seen as black holes in that context. We will not discuss black holes versus dark stars and the possibilities of such objects, but it is important to keep in mind that when we talk about the Schwarzschild radius here, it is also linked to Newton's gravity theory, since the same radius can be calculated from that theory.
Further, the Schwarzschild radius is related to gravitational time dilation (gra- 1 We will claim that the Newton method, as typically used, is not that sound because it involves a ki-

Speed of Gravity/Light from a Gravitational Red-Shift Experiment
If we shoot a laser beam of light from the top of a tower to the bottom of the tower, we can measure the redshift, with respective radii of h R and L R to the center of the Earth. The gravitational redshift is then given by where e v and o v are the escape velocity and the orbital velocity at these two radii, and L λ and h λ are the wavelengths at the two altitudes. Solved with respect to c, this gives In a weak gravitational field, o v c  and this can be well-approximated as Solved with respect to c, this gives We can also do the weak field approximation If the redshift is measured from two altitudes on Earth, then the gravitational acceleration field is naturally preferable. But we could also send a laser beam between two satellites orbiting the Earth at different altitudes and then we could just as well use the orbital velocities.

Speed of Gravity from Orbital Velocity and Two Atomic Clocks
If we have two atomic clocks sitting at different altitudes, then we have Obviously the Earth is rotating, so if the work is not done at the poles then we must take the different rotational speeds of the Earth at different altitudes into account (see [21] for an introduction on the topic). Therefore, we have Solved with respect to the speed of light, we have Table 1 below summarizes ways to extract the speed of light (gravity) from gravitational observations alone. Figure 1 illustrates some of the ways we can find the speed of gravity (or just light) by only doing gravity observations. In Figure 1(a), we have two orbiting satellites, we send light between them and measure the redshift. In addition, we measure the orbital velocity of the satellites and from this we know the speed of light. In Figure 1(b), we measure the gravitational time dilation at two altitudes, as well as the Earth's gravitational acceleration field at each altitude, and from Table 1. Ways to measure (extract) the speed of light/gravity from gravitational observations.

Prediction
Easily applicable in practice?
From redshift and orbital velocity From redshift and acceleration field Atomic clocks + orbital velocity Does not take rotation of Earth into account Atomic clocks + acceleration field Does not take rotation of Earth into account Atomic clocks + orbital velocity 2 2 2 2 , , this we know the speed of light (gravity).

No Need to Know G or the Mass Size or Even the Speed of Light to Find the Schwarzschild Radius and to Predict Other Gravity Phenomena
The past scientific literature does not seem to mention the fact that one can easily find the Schwarzschild radius (for example of the Earth) without any prior knowledge of the Newton gravitational constant or any knowledge of the mass size. This can be done by using the following relation where L g is the gravitational acceleration that on Earth's surface can be observed with no knowledge of gravitational theory. Further, the speed of light and the radius of the Earth can be found without any knowledge of gravitational theory. We have found that a long series of gravitational phenomena can be pre-E. G. Haug International Journal of Astronomy and Astrophysics dicted when one first has found the Schwarzschild radius without knowledge of G or the mass size, as clearly shown by [22] [23].
Interestingly, we can even find (measure) the Schwarzschild radius by replacing the speed of light with our extracted speed of light, as shown in the sections above. The Schwarzschild radius can be found based on the following formula gravity phenomena. Table 2 shows how a series of major gravity phenomena can be predicted simply from two observations of a light beam plus a measurement of the speed of light. This is done by measuring the wavelength of two distant points and knowing the radii where the measurements are taken relative to the gravity object (for example the Earth). This seems to provide a clear proof that gravity is directly linked to light and therefore, the speed of gravity must be exactly the speed of light.
General relativity theory has not been able to link its theory to quantum physics; E. G. Haug International Journal of Astronomy and Astrophysics l and λ can be measured independent of GR and without any knowledge of big G, see [25] [26]. For any known elementary particle, such as the electron, the reduced Compton wavelength is much larger than the Planck length. We will suggest that this means the Schwarzschild radius for particles with mass smaller than the Planck mass should be interpreted as a probabilistic Schwarzschild radius. In our view, all elementary particles have a Schwarzschild radius equal to the Planck length, but this comes in and out of existence at the Compton frequency of the particle. This means the Schwarzschild radius of an elementary particle smaller than the Planck mass simply is the Planck length multiplied by a probability that is given by:

When Using Gravity Observations (Only) Are We Measuring the Speed of Light or the Speed of Gravity?
We have shown a series of ways to extract the speed of gravity from observations this is obviously an old, but ongoing debate [29]- [35]. We would strongly suggest that such unification of electromagnetism and gravity is also observable at the macroscopic scale, not only at the quantum scale. There are many opinions here and we will not draw conclusions prematurely, but encourage more physicists to study this, both theoretically and experimentally.
It is well known that the Coulomb electrostatic force [36] , which basically is identical to our composite gravity constant, but he has pointed out that this leads to a circular problem, as he has followed the common assumptions in modern physics on this point, e.g., that one needs to know G to know p m and that his composite G then cannot be known without G. We, on the other hand, have shown that the Planck length can be found with no knowledge of G, see [25] [26] [43]. Then all the parts of this composite constant can be found independent of existing gravity theories. If this view is correct, then the speed of light, which likely is the same as the speed of gravity, is embedded in almost all gravity phenomena and it is not surprising that we can extract the speed of gravity from a series of gravity phenomena, without detecting gravity waves, and in a much simpler way. The Planck length is something we logically can relate to-it is a minimum length. The speed of light is how fast the fastest particle (photons) can move, and it is the longest distance something can travel in any given time interval. The gravitational constant, on the other hand, does not seem to correspond to anything logically or physically, as its dimensions are m 3 •kg −1 •s −2 . Newton's gravitational constant is clearly E. G. Haug International Journal of Astronomy and Astrophysics a universal constant, but in our view, it is a composite constant that consists of more fundamental constants. In particular, we think the Planck length and the speed of light (gravity) are essential for all gravity phenomena, even at the cosmological scale.
We are in no way indicating that Newton had any idea that gravity moved at the speed of light; the speed of gravity is often assumed to be infinite in Newtonian theory. But the speed of gravity in that theory is not truly reflected in the formula. It is indeed the lack of any speed in Newton's gravity formula and Newton's speculations that gravity was infinite that led many others to think it must be infinite. Newton's gravity formula is simply To get it to fit experiments, the formula had to be calibrated, that is, one had to introduce an unknown parameter, today know as big G (or simply the Newton gravity constant). The gravity constant is today experimentally found from what we can call gravitational model calibration. What exactly the gravity constant represents is diffuse, at best. If the speed of gravity plays a central role in all gravity phenomena, then it must be embedded in the Newton formula, even if it simply is as part of a composite constant calibrated to observations. If not, Newton would not have been able to predict the simplest gravity phenomena accurately. The fact that Newton theory does not predict the perihelion of Mercury correctly could simply be due to relativistic effects that not have been taken into account properly, see [44] for a recent discussion on this.
In 1798, the gravity constant was first measured indirectly when Cavendish wanted to weight the Earth with a torsion balance. And it was likely first in 1873 that the Newton gravity constant was mentioned explicitly by Cornu and Baille [45]. Again, it is still a mystery what the gravity constant truly represents. However, returning to recent measurements of the speed of gravity, based on the recent gravitational wave detection Cornish, Blas, and Nardini [14] claim "using a Bayesian approach that combines the first three gravitational wave detections reported by the LIGO Scientific and Virgo Collaborations we constrain the gravitational waves propagation speed gw c to the 90% credi- , where c is the speed of light in vacuum." we are not questioning their measurements or predictions here, but it also interesting if we can measure the speed of gravity in a much simpler way using the methodology suggested in this paper.

Isotropic or Anisotropic?
It has been suggested that the speed of gravity could be anisotropic [46]. It is therefore of interest to know if our extraction of the speed of gravity (light) from the experiments suggested in this paper could be helpful in this respect. To discuss this, we will address an old and ongoing debate related to the question of whether the one-way speed of light is isotropic or anisotropic. The idea that the one-way speed of light is constant and the same in every direction, e.g., isotropic, When a astronomer tells me that a stellar phenomenon, which his telescope reveals to him at this moment, happened, nevertheless, fifty years ago, I seek his meaning, and to that end I shall ask him first how he knows it, that is, how he had measured the velocity of light.
He has begun by supposing that light has a constant velocity, and in particular that its velocity is the same in all directions. That is a postulate without which no measurement of this velocity could be attempted. This postulate could never be verified by direct experiment.
Poincaré here indicates that it would be impossible to detect the true one-way speed of light in any type of experiment. The problem with this method is that to measure the one-way speed of light, we need to synchronize two clocks, and to synchronize two clocks we need to know the one-way speed of light. We end up with a circular problem. This is likely the reason Poincaré assumed that we could never measure the one-way speed of light and thereby assumed that the one-way speed of light was isotropic for synchronization purposes. In 1905, Einstein [48] goes one step further and simply abandons the ether and by this he also assumes that the one-way speed of light is isotropic. It can also be shown that slow clock transportation synchronization basically corresponds to Einsten-Poincaré synchronization, so this synchronization procedure cannot, in general, be used to set up experiments to detect the one-way speed of light, see [49] [50].
However, it is worth mentioning that a series of experiments have attempted to circumvent the Einstein-Poincaré synchronization procedure in order to detect whether the one-way speed of light is isotropic or anisotropic. A series of experiments have claimed to have detected anisotropic one-way speed of light, see [51]- [57], but many of these experiments have also been criticized, see, for example, [58] [59]. The debate around the one-way speed of light continues to this day [60] [61] [62] [63] and it also remains an open question whether the one-way speed of gravity is isotropic or anisotropic as well.
When it comes to our extraction of the speed of gravity (light) from gravity observations, these often involve two very precise clocks, atomic or optical clocks placed a distance apart. These clocks need to be synchronized, which intuitively suggest that our methods cannot be used to detect if the speed of gravity (light) is isotropic or anisotropic. On the other hand, in experiments where we only need to detect the redshift, then no clock synchronization should be necessary and this could possibly be used to measure the one-way speed of light (gravity). The main challenge would be to attain the degree of accuracy required, as we would also need to measure the gravitational acceleration at each altitude.
If it is the speed of gravity we actually are extracting and not only the speed of light, then the approaches in this paper are still very interesting. This means one E. G. Haug International Journal of Astronomy and Astrophysics does not need to rely on very sophisticated theories, such as gravity waves detectors, to detect the speed of gravity, but instead we can use much simpler experiments. However, if this is not giving us the speed of gravity, then we need good arguments to address why the speed of light is hidden in so many gravitational phenomena and how we can predict all major gravity phenomena, such as orbital velocity, gravitational time dilation, gravitational acceleration, and the Schwarzschild radius, all without any knowledge of G, c, or the gravity mass, but simply from a beam of light in the gravity field.

Conclusions
We have shown how one can, in a simple way, extract the speed of light (gravity) from gravitational observations alone. Even if it only seems to consist of a rearrangement of existing formulas, the exercise and analysis can lead to new insights. We would note some things are so simple that they seem obvious when first pointed out, but they may have deeper implications and certainly deserve further examination.
It is, at present, an open question on whether or not there is a link between gravity and electromagnetism, and there is a renewed interest in the link between the two. We have shown how a series of major gravity phenomena can be predicted by some simple observations of a light beam, namely its velocity and its wavelength at two altitudes in a gravitational field. This may provide a small breakthrough in the current insights around gravity. A unified theory between electromagnetism and gravity is still missing, but hopefully this takes us one step further in the right direction.
In this appendix, we show the cases where we want to measure/predict the gravitational phenomena at one of the same radii from which we measured the wavelength of the beam; see Table 3. Table 3. The table shows that all major gravity phenomena can be predicted by only two (or three) observations from a light beam in the gravitational field of the gravity object. We need to measure the wavelength at two altitudes of a light beam plus the speed of light. There is no need to know the Newton gravitational constant or the mass of the gravity object. This also strongly supports the ideas that there is a direct connection between electromagnetism and gravity and that the speed of gravity is actually the speed of light.