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-3 votes
3 answers
76 views

Does Matter Cause Curvature or Vice-Versa [closed]

From the way explanations about gravity-acceleration-curvature equivalence are usually phrased here or elsewhere, it would appear many or most think that matter causes space-time curvature. I cannot ...
Prototypist's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
48 views

How can you use gravity while trying to model gravity? [duplicate]

So consider the usual pop-science spacetime model, a bowling ball on a trampoline. Apparently, the ball should sink into the trampoline, causing a dip in the fabric which causes nearby objects to fall ...
stickynotememo's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
42 views

Einstein's equation of gravitation field [duplicate]

I'm looking for the reason why there is the number eight $8$ at the r.h.s. of EI: $$R_{\mu\nu}-\frac{1}{2}Rg_{\mu\nu}=\frac{8\pi G}{c^2}T_{\mu\nu}.$$ My attempt was to take the limit of this equation ...
user2925716's user avatar
4 votes
5 answers
260 views

How is Gravity, assuming only General Relativity, *not* like Centrifugal Force?

It is common to state that "Gravity is not a force" due to its interpretation as a curvature effect in general relativity. By this, is it right to say that gravity is a fictitious force due ...
Anthony Khodanian's user avatar
-7 votes
1 answer
138 views

So just because gravity "merely" bends space and isn't "really" a force at a distance - isn't it still a thing at a distance? [closed]

As a preamble, just for clarity as far as I can remember (I was awfully drunk) I have a degree in physics, math and comp sci: my point is "here's a probably stupid question at the level of person ...
Fattie's user avatar
  • 994
2 votes
2 answers
111 views

Why does the warping of spacetime make objects move closer together?

I understand why the warping of spacetime affects moving objects, but why would it affect stationary ones if it even does? Would two completely stationary objects not move closer together because they ...
Hunter Sherring's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
28 views

Why are the zero modes of the below operator Killing vectors? (2+1 dimensional gravity)

I'm trying to understand the eigenmodes of the following operator: $$(\Delta_{(1)}^{L L}-\frac{2}{3} R)V_\nu \equiv -\nabla^\mu \nabla_\mu V_\nu+R_{\nu \mu} V^\mu -\frac{2}{3} RV_\nu $$ Where $R_{\mu\...
faker 23's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
59 views

Are gravitons suggested as the cause of matter curving space?

My understand is that GR says that mass curves space but it does not say why or how this occurs. Is the idea of gravitons that they are the entities that actually affect space?
releseabe's user avatar
  • 2,238
0 votes
0 answers
73 views

Are there any ways to conceptualize the relationship between gravity and space-time other than curvatures?

This might sound like a random question, but it came to me while I was trying to conceptualize the size of the universe and started thinking of entire galaxies resembling grands of sand floating ...
cosmic_ocean's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
77 views

Gravitational field of the star changes the paths of light rays, how is this observed during eclipse?

The gravitational field of the star changes the paths of light rays in space-time from what they would have been had the star not been present. I understand that the light cones are bend slightly ...
Amit Naik's user avatar
  • 103
1 vote
1 answer
97 views

Limit of gravity

Is there any limit to the bending of spacetime due to gravity? I have been reading about wormholes and how they bend spacetime and connect two systems. But if there is no limit to gravity, we can ...
Surajsing Rajput's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
92 views

Can a CTC contaning spacetime be purely electric?

Take a time-oriented Lorentzian manifold $(M, g)$ where $M$ is a topological 4-manifold and $g$ a Lorenzian metric. Assume such a spacetime contains a CTC. Since the manifold is time-oriented, one can ...
Bastam Tajik's user avatar
  • 1,268
2 votes
7 answers
1k views

I can't wrap my head around the idea of matter interacting with spacetime. How is the interaction taking place? [closed]

I have tried Googling this for a long time. I have read many forums on this. But still, it doesn't make sense. General relativity says that space-time is bent/changes when a massive object is there. ...
interstellarPotato's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
49 views

How the equivalence principle leads to the idea of curved spacetime? [duplicate]

In wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equivalence_principle, there are three forms of equivalence principle ( equivalence of gravitational and inertial mass ) : Weak version (Galilean) : The ...
Plantation's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
53 views

Question on gravity and spacetime curvature [duplicate]

In General Theory of Relativity, it is explained that the fabric of reality i.e. spacetime bends around objects with mass, and that curvature causes other objects to come close to/ fall towards the ...
Rudransh Joshi's user avatar

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