the hardest thing to believe was when the article I read
said that the arm became longer...

it would have been much more believable if they would have
been truthful about it and said that the laser beam bent
slightly due to the increased gravity intensity.

but of course that wouldn't have been so sensational now
would it.

the amount of gravity intensity change was extremely low
and certainly would have barely moved the beam itself
let along lengthening the entire 2.5 mile long arm

my first impression was that this claim must have been
a prop up job for Einstein and his ever continuing magic show
portrayed by his cast of followers , not actual scientist.

Quote:
Does gravity exist?.... Yes.
Does gravity have a physical influence?.... Yes.
Is gravity a field?.... Yes.
Is it possible to perturb a field?.... Yes.
Is it likely that perturbations of a field would manifest as waves?.... Yes.
Given the above, is it reasonable to assume that gravitational waves might exist?.... Yes.


that's all good for gravity , but gravity wouldn't stretch
time as time has no physical properties that would lend itself
to stretching.

spacetime does not exist and neither space nor time have
physical properties that would lend themselves to stretching.

I can see a gravity wave existing but not a continual wave
like a light wave unless the volume of mass were being
continually increased and decreased , but not due to
a merging of two masses as is proposed in the articles.


3/4 inch of dust build up on the moon in 4.527 billion years,LOL and QM is fantasy science.