All Questions
480
questions
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50
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Does gravity accelerate you towards the geodesic of light between you and the mass?
If there's a planet far away, you will accelerate straight towards it due to gravity. If you place a Schwarzschild black hole right in the middle between you and the planet (the distance between the ...
8
votes
5
answers
1k
views
Do you always experience the gravitational influence of other mass as you see them in your frame?
You see a galaxy far away. That galaxy is attracting you with a certain amount of gravity. I'm wondering if the gravity influence of the galaxy on you, as measured by you, always ends up being what ...
-3
votes
3
answers
76
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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 ...
1
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0
answers
48
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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 ...
1
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1
answer
104
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Does dark matter have mass?
When trying to understand what dark matter is, it is helpful to know that some properties of it can already be derived from various observations, such as, it only interacting via gravity and no other ...
-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 ...
19
votes
6
answers
8k
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If gravity is not a force, what makes massive objects spheroid?
For most of my life, the explanation given for why celestial bodies like stars, planets, etc. are round is due to gravitational force. Simply put, if an object has enough mass, it will, in turn, have ...
1
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1
answer
89
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How does gravity act and propagate in a 2+1D universe?—Newtonian versus general relativity
In a hypothetical 2+1D universe:
if we apply the Newtonian concept of gravity, we might expect that the gravitational force between two mass points with a distance of $r$ would diminish linearly with ...
-1
votes
1
answer
83
views
Apparent paradox in general relativity wrt relative gravity, spacetime curvature and time dilation [closed]
Imagine Alice is near a massive black hole and Bob is on the Earth.
Obviously their gravitational fields are different for each other. In other words, their spacetime is flat for themselves but curved ...
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 ...
1
vote
2
answers
117
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Curvature of space from approaching gravity sources affecting observations of expansion
Since gravity curves space, I wonder how the locally increasing density of matter and energy due to the current galactic mergers with the Milky Way affects our perception of the universe.
Basically, ...
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?
0
votes
1
answer
85
views
How does light get affected by gravity? [duplicate]
If photons don't have mass, how come gravity can bend light? Because if photons have no weight, wouldn't they not be affected by the fabric of spacetime?
-2
votes
2
answers
115
views
What is the current most widely-accepted explanation of gravity? [closed]
What do physicists typically say gives gravity the ability to act on a pair of objects?
I am not asking for a description of gravity as a scalar field, but rather what the current accepted theory is ...
0
votes
1
answer
85
views
How time creates gravity? According to time curve [duplicate]
How time dilation creates gravity? I'm assuming gravity is not a force(Einstein's words)
0
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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 ...
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 ...
1
vote
1
answer
97
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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 ...
-2
votes
2
answers
71
views
Shouldn't there be a gravitational field without any mass in our 3d space? [closed]
Imagine there is a Neutron star Displaced a small distance from our accessible 3d slice in the direction transverse to that 3d slice. It will bend the space around it. It will also bend the space of ...
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. ...
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 ...
5
votes
2
answers
312
views
The limit of GR with infinite speed of light $c$
Just answer what you can. I don't mean the zero curvature flat space time version. I know that the Einstein Field equations use $c$ as a constant, but what would the universe be like if gravity was ...
1
vote
1
answer
67
views
Is pp-wave spacetime strongly causal?
Is pp-wave spacetime, strongly casual?
If not, where is it on the causal ladder?
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 ...
1
vote
1
answer
44
views
A question on the causal hierarchy/ladder and the existence of CTC
What does the existence of CTC imply for the Causal Structure of the spacetime?
Can a strongly causal spacetime have any CTC[without fluctuating the metric]?
Is there any such example?
Can someone ...
2
votes
1
answer
101
views
About the nature of gravity
Let's consider a corner of spacetime far enough of any other mass so that the spacetime would be nearly flat in this neighborhood, a kind of mass desert.
Let's consider a mass in the center of this ...
4
votes
6
answers
1k
views
How does general relativity theory explain gravitational pull? [duplicate]
I watched some videos on YouTube that explain why gravity is not a force,
according to general relativity theory.
I can wrap my head around the idea that spacetime can be curved due to a massive mass,
...
2
votes
1
answer
143
views
Question on Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff (TOV) equation for time-dependent spacetimes [closed]
Is there a way to conceive a TOV equation, and therefore the stability analysis for a metric like:
$$ ds^2 = -dt^2 + a^2(t,r)\big(dr^2 + r^2d\Omega ^2\big)~?\tag{1}$$
1
vote
0
answers
49
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Initial-value problem for gravitational waves
Gravitational waves have been very much in the news recently and I would like to understand them better. I know vaguely that they cause transverse changes to the geometry of matter as they pass by. ...
2
votes
2
answers
387
views
Is there a relation between spacetime curvature and radiation?
To my understanding, the curvature of spacetime is determined by the stress-energy tensor.
I was wondering if we could calculate some of those components using radiation.
Is it possible that objects ...