Skip to main content
9 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Mar 8 at 1:33 vote accept Moguntius
Mar 6 at 16:10 comment added Attila Janos Kovacs What you are writing about and asking about is only one type of gravitational waves: the case of weak (perturbative) gravitational waves propagating in Minkowski spacetime. These can be described by linearized Einstein's equations and using the D'Alembert wave equation. - But this does not handle the other types. The strong gravitational waves and the waves generated and propagating in the background of curved spacetime.
Mar 6 at 15:58 answer added Dexter Kim timeline score: 2
Mar 5 at 3:17 history became hot network question
Mar 5 at 1:55 history edited Qmechanic CC BY-SA 4.0
added 2 characters in body; edited tags
Mar 4 at 23:06 answer added Vincent Thacker timeline score: 13
Mar 4 at 20:37 answer added Integral fan timeline score: 4
Mar 4 at 19:22 history edited Moguntius CC BY-SA 4.0
Fixed grammer
Mar 4 at 19:15 history asked Moguntius CC BY-SA 4.0