Does Light Travel the Shortest Path in Curved Space-Time Around a Neutron Star?

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  • #36
Ibix said:
edited above
Btw, I'm not sure @Nugatory disagrees either. I think he just made a terminology slip. See below.

Nugatory said:
which static spacelike planes? There's more than one way to slice the spacetime up into spacelike planes
Yes, but only one of those slicings is orthogonal to the timelike KVF. And since "static" means the timelike KVF is hypersurface orthogonal, the obvious meaning of "static spacelike planes" is the slicing that is orthogonal to the timelike KVF.
 
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  • #37
Ibix said:
It's easy enough to write down an equation for geodesics in the spatial plane. If we pick coordinates so that the motion is in the equatorial plane then ##d\theta=0## and the Lagrangian is $$\mathcal{L}=\frac 1{1-2GM/r}\left(\frac{dr}{d\lambda}\right)^2+r^2\left(\frac{d\phi}{d\lambda}\right)^2$$The ##\phi## Euler-Lagrange equation yields ##\frac{d\phi}{d\lambda}=\frac{L}{r^2}##, where ##L## is a constant of the motion, and the ##r## one yields$$\frac{d^2r}{d\lambda^2}=\frac{GM}{r(r-2GM)}\left(\frac{dr}{d\lambda}\right)^2+\frac{L^2(r-2GM)}{r^4}$$
...

I think that's correct. Let's see what others say.
What I am looking for ...
Is there any physical experiment proving that light speed slows down in gravitation field? (not for local observer . For him is constant c.)
pervect said:
Yes.

I'm not sure what the original poster is struggling with. It might be illuminating for him to take a simple case. ...
I am a mathematician , not physicist . I am trying to understand properties of geometry around heavy spherical object e.g. a neutron star or a black hole.
It looks to me there has to be two photon spheres .
I asked question about spacial distance because that (sub)space is full Reimannian metric space . (only distance from a point to itself is zero)
Space time in GR is pseudo-Reimannian (All events-points on a light-cone are on zero distance)

Thanks
 
  • #38
The question of the uniqueness of the timelike Killing vector field in the Schwarzschild metric is something I've glossed over a bit, because I haven't really worked out anything rigorous. But I believe that you can construct a vector field that is timelike in a certain region by adding together multiples of the kvf for ##\partial / \partial t## and some multiple of ##\partial / \partial \phi## in the usual Schwarzschild metric with coordinates ##(t, r, \theta, \phi)## to generate another kvf. This new field won't be timelike everywhere, though, it will only be timelike in a certain region. This isn't exhaustive - there are two other space-like Killing vector fields according to wiki, that basically correspond to the freedom of choice in chosing the equatorial plane. Probably something needs to be added about smoothness or differentiability of the KVF, but I'm not sure how to word that.
 
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  • #39
Bosko said:
Is there any physical experiment proving that light speed slows down in gravitation field?
That isn't a well defined question because "space" is a matter of choice, even in static spacetimes. So speed is also a matter of choice except when it is measured locally, in which case it's a measure of the inner product of the four velocities of the objects.

That said, Shapiro delay of radar pulses bounced off Venus is usually interpreted as demonstrating that the coordinate speed of light varies.
 
  • #40
Bosko said:
Is there any physical experiment proving that light speed slows down in gravitation field?
There can't be because "light speed slows down in a gravitational field" is not a coordinate-free, invariant statement. So you're going to have to be more explicit about exactly what experimental result you are interested in.

Bosko said:
I am a mathematician , not physicist . I am trying to understand properties of geometry around heavy spherical object e.g. a neutron star or a black hole.
"Light speed" is not a property of geometry. It's a property of particular choices of coordinates.

The light cones are a property of the spacetime geometry. But it doesn't seem like you're interested in the spacetime geometry because it's not Riemannian. Which means you're leaving out a lot of information that is highly relevant to the physics involved.

Bosko said:
It looks to me there has to be two photon spheres .
Why? This is false; there is only one photon sphere in Schwarzschild spacetime.

Bosko said:
I asked question about spacial distance because that (sub)space is full Reimannian metric space . (only distance from a point to itself is zero)
Yes, but, as has already been pointed out, the geodesics of this space are not the same as the curves you get when you project spacetime geodesics into this space.
 
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  • #41
pervect said:
I believe that you can construct a vector field that is timelike in a certain region by adding together multiples of the kvf for ##\partial / \partial t## and some multiple of ##\partial / \partial \phi## in the usual Schwarzschild metric with coordinates ##(t, r, \theta, \phi)## to generate another kvf.
Yes, as long as you form the linear combination with constant coefficients (i.e., the coefficients are the same at every event). Any linear combination of kvfs with constant coefficients is also a kvf.

pervect said:
This new field won't be timelike everywhere, though, it will only be timelike in a certain region.
More precisely, it won't be timelike in the same region (everywhere outside the horizon) that ##\partial / \partial t## is. It will be timelike in a smaller region (basically from just outside the horizon to just inside a finite value of ##r##--exactly which value will depend on what constant coefficients you choose to form the linear combination). Heuristically, the outer boundary of this region is the point at which an object following the integral curve of the KVF at that point would have to move at the speed of light (i.e., the integral curve becomes null).

Also, this new kvf won't be hypersurface orthogonal. Hypersurface orthogonality is the unique property that picks out ##\partial / \partial t## from all the other possible timelike KVFs in this spacetime.

pervect said:
there are two other space-like Killing vector fields according to wiki, that basically correspond to the freedom of choice in chosing the equatorial plane.
Yes, there is actually a three-parameter group of KVFs that you can form by the process above, since the spacelike KVFs arising from spherical symmetry form a three-parameter group.

pervect said:
Probably something needs to be added about smoothness or differentiability of the KVF, but I'm not sure how to word that.
This is taken care of by the linear combination process; if the kvfs you are combining meet all those conditions, so will any linear combination of them with constant coefficients.
 
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  • #42
PeterDonis said:
...
Why? This is false; there is only one photon sphere in Schwarzschild spacetime.
...
Yes you are right for the Schwarzschild spacetime outside the object.
Sorry, I didn't explain well this my opinion about the two photon spheres.

Imagine a neutron star with a photon sphere.
We have space-time outside and inside (internal Schwarzschild solution). I meant the inner and outer photon spheres. Of course that inner photon sphere is only a space-time region within e.g. neutron stars probably without photons orbiting it.
 
  • #43
Orodruin said:
Take any static spacetime. The metric in such a spacetime may be written in static coordinates ##t## and ##x^i## as
$$
ds^2 = f(x)\, dt^2 - d\Sigma^2
= f(x)\, dt^2 - g_{ij} dx^i dx^j
$$
where ##d\Sigma^2## is the (Riemannian) metric on the spatial slices defining simultaneous static time.

By the time translation symmetry, it follows that
$$
E = g(\partial_t, \dot \gamma) = f(x)\dot t
$$
is constant for any spacetime geodesic ##\gamma##. The spatial parts of the spacetime geodesic equations take the form (assuming I did the math right)
$$
\bar\nabla_{\dot x} \dot x^j = \frac{E^2}2 g^{jk}\partial_k(1/f)
$$
with ##\bar\nabla## representing the affine connection on the spatial slices. For the worldline to correspond to a geodesic when projected on the spatial slices, this should at the very least satisfy the non-affinely parametrised geodesic equations on the spatial slice. This would require the RHS to be proportional to ##\dot x^j##, which is not the case.
Thanks
 
  • #44
Bosko said:
Imagine a neutron star with a photon sphere.
We have space-time outside and inside (internal Schwarzschild solution). I meant the inner and outer photon spheres. Of course that inner photon sphere is only a space-time region within e.g. neutron stars probably without photons orbiting it.
I see, the inner photon sphere is inside the neutron star, and inside that inner photon sphere, an idealized test object that could follow a geodesic path without being disturbed by the neutron star's matter could follow a circular geodesic orbit (with the limiting case being the geodesic at ##r = 0## that just stays at rest there).
 
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  • #45
PeterDonis said:
I see, the inner photon sphere is inside the neutron star, and inside that inner photon sphere, an idealized test object that could follow a geodesic path without being disturbed by the neutron star's matter could follow a circular geodesic orbit (with the limiting case being the geodesic at ##r = 0## that just stays at rest there).
Hahaha ... thanks anyway

I even drew a rough cross-section of Flamm's paraboloid with the interior Schwarzschild solution added.
Paraboloid_cross_section.png

The inner photon sphere must definitely be there even though there probably aren't any photons. Certainly, if someone made a circular tunnel and photons would move through it in circles around the center.

That region of space-time between the inner and outer photon sphere seems to me to have very unusual and interesting properties.
 
  • #46
Bosko said:
That region of space-time between the inner and outer photon sphere seems to me to have very unusual and interesting properties.
Yes, although I don't think any known neutron stars are compact enough for that region to be present. As far as I know all neutron stars have ##r > 3M## at their surfaces, so there is no photon sphere anywhere.
 
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  • #47
PeterDonis said:
Yes, although I don't think any known neutron stars are compact enough for that region to be present. As far as I know all neutron stars have ##r > 3M## at their surfaces, so there is no photon sphere anywhere.
it's a shame :-) this whole discussion goes to waste.

Is there any chance that a neutron star is compact enough to form a photon sphere around it, or at least for a moment as it collapses into a black hole?

I was interested in the shortest paths between two points everywhere in the surrounding area, but especially in that area.
 
  • #48
Bosko said:
Is there any chance that a neutron star is compact enough to form a photon sphere around it
The Buchdahl Theorem limit on how compact a static object can be is ##r > (9/4) M## at the object's surface, which is inside the photon sphere. So in principle a compact object like a neutron star could have a photon sphere around it, at least if we just look at GR. The question would be whether there is any state of matter that has an equation of state that allows a stable equilibrium in that size range.

Bosko said:
or at least for a moment as it collapses into a black hole?
A collapsing object is not static, so while the exterior geometry (i.e., the vacuum region around the object) will have a photon sphere, the interior geometry won't be the same as in the static case, and I don't think there will be a meaningful photon sphere inside the object.
 
  • #49
Bosko said:
I was interested in the shortest paths between two points everywhere in the surrounding area, but especially in that area.
The same general statement we gave for the exterior region would apply in this area as well: the geodesics of the space (i.e., of a spacelike slice of constant time) will not, in general, be the same as the projections of spacetime geodesics into the space.

In the interior of the object, note that the spatial geometry is that of a 3-sphere, not a Flamm paraboloid.
 
  • #50
PeterDonis said:
...

In the interior of the object, note that the spatial geometry is that of a 3-sphere, not a Flamm paraboloid.
The transition from the outside (Flamm's paraboloid) to the inside (it also looks like a paraboloid) should be smooth.

There are inflection points on the surface of the object
 
  • #51
Bosko said:
The transition from the outside (Flamm's paraboloid) to the inside (it also looks like a paraboloid) should be smooth.
Yes, it's smooth. I'm not sure where you are getting "looks like a paraboloid" from. My understanding is that the spatial geometry of the interior solution is a 3-sphere.

Bosko said:
There are inflection points on the surface of the object
If you mean an inflection point of the "slope" of the spatial geometry in an embedding diagram, yes.
 
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  • #52
  • #53
But that's not a "black-hole solution" but the original Schwarzschild solution for a static incompressible fluid of constant density.
 
  • #54
vanhees71 said:
But that's not a "black-hole solution" but the original Schwarzschild solution for a static incompressible fluid of constant density.
The OP said they were interested in both.
 
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  • #55
Orodruin said:
Take any static spacetime. The metric in such a spacetime may be written in static coordinates ##t## and ##x^i## as
$$
ds^2 = f(x)\, dt^2 - d\Sigma^2
= f(x)\, dt^2 - g_{ij} dx^i dx^j
$$
where ##d\Sigma^2## is the (Riemannian) metric on the spatial slices defining simultaneous static time.

By the time translation symmetry, it follows that
$$
E = g(\partial_t, \dot \gamma) = f(x)\dot t
$$
is constant for any spacetime geodesic ##\gamma##. The spatial parts of the spacetime geodesic equations take the form (assuming I did the math right)
$$
\bar\nabla_{\dot x} \dot x^j = \frac{E^2}2 g^{jk}\partial_k(1/f)
$$
with ##\bar\nabla## representing the affine connection on the spatial slices. For the worldline to correspond to a geodesic when projected on the spatial slices, this should at the very least satisfy the non-affinely parametrised geodesic equations on the spatial slice. This would require the RHS to be proportional to ##\dot x^j##, which is not the case.
For which observer does the speed of light slows down entering a stronger gravitational field?

Let's imagine...
two_observers.png

Let two rays of light emitted at point B arrive at (detector) point A at the same time.
Does ##L_A=L_B## for both observers?

For example, ##t_A=20 ns, L_A=6 m## and ##t_B=10 ns, L_B=3 m##.
If ##L_{AB}## is removed from both paths, we get ##2L_A=2L_B## and ##L_A=L_B##.
(Speed of light = 30 cm, or foot, per nano second)

The speed of light appears to be constant for any observer regardless of the gravitational field.
I'm interested in whether it slows down as approaches the photon sphere (or the event horizon).
 
  • #56
Bosko said:
Let two rays of light emitted at point B arrive at (detector) point A at the same time.
How is that even possible? Two different rays would be emitted from point B at different times, and that means they would arrive at point A at different times.
 
  • #57
Bosko said:
Does ##L_A=L_B## for both observers?
Yes. The time taken for light to travel is what is different for the two observers. The simplest way to test that is for each observer to send a round-trip light signal that reflects off a mirror at the other observer's location, and then compare the round-trip travel times by the two observers' clocks.
 
  • #58
PeterDonis said:
How is that even possible? Two different rays would be emitted from point B at different times, and that means they would arrive at point A at different times.
Both ray are emitted from the same source and at same time from point B ( see image)
 
  • #59
Bosko said:
Both ray are emitted from the same source and at same time from point B ( see image)
Then what's the point of having two rays? The two rays aren't telling you anything that one ray wouldn't tell you.
 
  • #60
PeterDonis said:
Then what's the point of having two rays? The two rays aren't telling you anything that one ray wouldn't tell you.
By adjusting the LA, you can set them to arrive at the same time.
Then ##L_A=L_B## for both observers.
 
  • #61
Bosko said:
By adjusting the LA, you can set them to arrive at the same time.
You can't "adjust" the LA; both rays leave from the same place, point B, and arrive at the same place, point A. That means they both travel the same distance. Whether that same distance covered by both rays has the same numerical as measured by both observers is a separate question that your scenario does not give any information about at all.

Bosko said:
Then ##L_A=L_B## for both observers.
That is true, but your scenario has, as far as I can tell, nothing to do with this true statement.
 
  • #62
Bosko said:
For which observer does the speed of light slows down entering a stronger gravitational field?

Let's imagine...
View attachment 337779
Let two rays of light emitted at point B arrive at (detector) point A at the same time.
Does ##L_A=L_B## for both observers?

For example, ##t_A=20 ns, L_A=6 m## and ##t_B=10 ns, L_B=3 m##.
If ##L_{AB}## is removed from both paths, we get ##2L_A=2L_B## and ##L_A=L_B##.
(Speed of light = 30 cm, or foot, per nano second)

The speed of light appears to be constant for any observer regardless of the gravitational field.
I'm interested in whether it slows down as approaches the photon sphere (or the event horizon).
It seems to me there is a lot wrong with this. Especially what you mean by certain terms. What does length mean (for an observer)? How is the length of a path through space defined for a given observer?

How is the speed of light defined in curved spacetime?

Ultimately, it seems like a simplistic analysis that doesn't take account of how theese quantities are defined.
 
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  • #63
PeroK said:
It seems to me there is a lot wrong with this. Especially what you mean by certain terms. What does length mean (for an observer)? How is the length of a path through space defined for a given observer?
The initial assumption is a constant speed of light for a local observer.
It measures some local distances. ( for example using https://www.fluke.com/en/product/building-infrastructure/laser-distance-meters/417d)
PeroK said:
How is the speed of light defined in curved spacetime?
The definition is self-explanatory to the local observer. (Distance 30 cm that light travels for a time unit of 1 nanosecond)
PeroK said:
Ultimately, it seems like a simplistic analysis that doesn't take account of how theese quantities are defined.
I analyse how two observers can agree on the measured distances.
I am interested in questions:
Is the speed of light the same for any observer regardless of the gravitational field?
Does light travel along the (locally) shortest path between two points?
 
  • #64
Bosko said:
The initial assumption is a constant speed of light for a local observer.
It measures some local distances. ( for example using https://www.fluke.com/en/product/building-infrastructure/laser-distance-meters/417d)

The definition is self-explanatory to the local observer. (Distance 30 cm that light travels for a time unit of 1 nanosecond)

I analyse how two observers can agree on the measured distances.
I am interested in questions:
Is the speed of light the same for any observer regardless of the gravitational field?
Does light travel along the (locally) shortest path between two points?

You are talking about the local speed of light as if it is something that were measured. With modern SI definitions, the speed of light is no longer something that is measured. Since it's clear that you're not (cannot be) using the SI defintion of distance, , to give some meaningful answer to your question, we'd need to know what you are basing your concept of "measuring the speed of light" on.

Fundamentally, it's not clear what you're asking, because it's not clear how you are regarding light as something whose speed needs to be measured. I used to assume that people asking this question were using one particular old definition of the meter based on a standard "prototype" meter bar. However, I quickly found that actually people had no idea of what they thought a meter was - it was some internal mental concept to them, and they never thought about the process of how it was standardized so it could be communicated to others and realized in practice. There's quite a bit of history on the topic of the issue of measurement, starting with the "treaty of the metre" and the origin of the BIPM, "the international organization established by the Metre Convention". Where in this history you are is unclear, it's only clear that you're not using the modern ideas.

As I mentioned previously, the general process of defining distance is based on reducing a 4 dimensional space-time manifold to a three dimensional spatial manifold. It's reasonably clear how this is done when the space-time geometry is static (as on an elevator accelerating with a constant acceleration or with the Schwarzschild geometry), but to actually answer your question in a more general case, you'd need to define how you are reducing the 4-d space-time manifold to a 3-d space only manifold.

As I recall, you gave a sensible (though not very rigorous) answer to this question when I asked it earlier, so it's not clear what went wrong with the communication process in that you're asking the same question again. It seems worthwhile to repeat myself (at greater length) once, but not more. If this attempt doesn't work this time, I'm going to assume it's a lost cause :(.

The answer to your second question, "does light always travel on a path of shortest distance", with distance being defined by the above approach of reducing a 4d manifold to a 3d manifold, is in general no. I've proposed some specific examples, but I haven't talked about them at length. I'd suggest you take some time to think about the issue - it could be productive for you describe a particular 4d geometry (by giving us a metric), then defining the induced 3d geometry (most clearly done by giving us the 3d line element).

To give an example in practice, Einstein's elevator can be described with the Rindler metric. Using geometric units, the 4d line element is:

$$-c^2 z^2 dt^2 + dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2$$

This represents an elevator accelerating in the "z" direction. Not that the origin of the coordinates is at z=1. There are ways to reformumulate this so that the origin is at z=0, but it'd be confusing to introduce two examples so I'll use this one, unless you think it'd be helpful to use a different one.

The induced 3d metric is given by the line element

$$dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2$$

Given this framework, we can then answer the question. Does light follow a straight line path in the 3d spatial submanifold? The answer is no, it does not. Physically, if we shine a light beam along the line "x=constant", it appears to drop as the elevator accelerates, following a path that is roughly (but not exactly) parabolic.

We can also answer the question: is the coordinate speed of light constant? The answer is again no, the coordinate speed of light depends on the "height" , given by the coordinate z. So the coordinate speed of light is equal to c only at z=1.

If you have an alternative example, we can discuss it if you give the needed information - which is specifying the 4d manifold with a line element, describing the process by which you reduce the 4d manifold to a 3d manifold, and then, as a double check, giving us the line element for the induced line element.

If you wish to discuss speed, and you want to discuss something other than coordinate speed, you'll need to tell us what notion of "speed" you are using.
 
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  • #65
Bosko said:
I analyse how two observers can agree on the measured distances.
I don't see that you've actually done any analysis. You just posed a scenario that makes no sense and is irrelevant to what you are asking about.

Bosko said:
Is the speed of light the same for any observer regardless of the gravitational field?
It depends on what you mean by "the speed of light". The light cone structure of spacetime is invariant. But the "speed of light" defined by non-local measurements, such as two observers at different altitudes in a gravitational field exchanging light signals, might not be.

Bosko said:
Does light travel along the (locally) shortest path between two points?
Not in the sense you mean. As has already been said in this thread (more than once, IIRC), the projection of a null (or timelike) geodesic of spacetime into "space", i.e., a spacelike surface of constant coordinate time in some relevant coordinate chart, will not be a geodesic of the spacelike surface.
 
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  • #66
PeterDonis said:
It depends on what you mean by "the speed of light". The light cone structure of spacetime is invariant. But the "speed of light" defined by non-local measurements, such as two observers at different altitudes in a gravitational field exchanging light signals, might not be.
Are those two observers are static?
How they exchange light signals to get different results?
 
  • #67
pervect said:
...
To give an example in practice, Einstein's elevator can be described with the Rindler metric. Using geometric units, the 4d line element is:

$$-c^2 z^2 dt^2 + dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2$$

This represents an elevator accelerating in the "z" direction. Not that the origin of the coordinates is at z=1. There are ways to reformumulate this so that the origin is at z=0, but it'd be confusing to introduce two examples so I'll use this one, unless you think it'd be helpful to use a different one.

The induced 3d metric is given by the line element

$$dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2$$
If light follow the null geodesic of 4D interval defined as ##-c^2 z^2 dt^2 + dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2##
## dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2=c^2 z^2 dt^2##

## \frac{dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2}{ z^2}=c^2 dt^2##

3D spacelike "differential" interval should be the left side

## \frac{dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2}{ z^2}##
pervect said:
Given this framework, we can then answer the question. Does light follow a straight line path in the 3d spatial submanifold? The answer is no, it does not. Physically, if we shine a light beam along the line "x=constant", it appears to drop as the elevator accelerates, following a path that is roughly (but not exactly) parabolic.

Is that path the sortest?
 
  • #68
Bosko said:
Are those two observers are static?
How they exchange light signals to get different results?
You stand at the top of a building and I'll stand at the bottom. We use a ruler to measure the distance between us and we will agree that value - we must, because we use the same ruler at the same time in the same way.

Now we bounce radar pulses off each other. We do not agree the return time due to gravitational time dilation.

We agree distance travelled but not time taken. This we do not agree speed.
 
  • #69
Ibix said:
We agree distance travelled but not time taken. This we do not agree speed.
We should agree on the electro-magnetic radiation speed but not agree on the distance - the height of the building.
The ruler is the same but we can't agree about its length.

Let's imagine that time ticking 1/10 slower on my clock then on yours ...
For me the radar pulse goes up and back in 600 nano seconds ...
and I am calculating 300 nano seconds times 1 feet (30 cm) = 300 feet (100 meters )

For you the radar pulse goes down and back in 660 nano seconds ...
and you are calculating 330 nano seconds times 1 feet (30 cm) = 330 feet (110 meters )

Any speeds we measure are the same but time and distance measured by me have to be multiplied by 1,1 to agree with your measurement
 
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  • #70
Bosko said:
Are those two observers are static?
Yes.

Bosko said:
How they exchange light signals to get different results?
Their clocks will measure different round-trip travel times for the light signals.
 

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