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-3 votes
0 answers
64 views

Does Mass Actually Displace Space-Time, or does Mass only Distort it?

1. Question Given the plethora of space-time illustrations, there is a sense that space-time is actually being displaced by mass, (planets). But on its face, this doesn't really make sense because ...
elika kohen's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
239 views

How did Einstein figure out mass (and hence energy) bends spacetime?

I can understand that once I fix the velocity of light at $c$, there is a relative variation in space-time based on special relativity (inertial frame of reference). It's not clear to me how Einstein ...
iVenky's user avatar
  • 131
2 votes
2 answers
917 views

Theoretically, can perfectly flat space exist in the universe?

According to general relativity, mass and energy cause the curvature of space. To have perfectly flat space, there must be a completely empty vacuum state with no mass or energy. Theoretically, is it ...
NOH WHIREA's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
68 views

Understanding Wormholes Geometrically

Is the folding sheet analogy really that good for understanding what a wormhole is? After all, space-time curvature doesn't require any ambient space (it's intrinsic), as such a picture would suggest. ...
user345249's user avatar
26 votes
10 answers
13k views

How do black holes move if they are just regions in spacetime?

If black holes are just regions of spacetime, how can black holes even move? When matter moves through spacetime, it bends the spacetime around it, but if black holes are just regions of spacetime, ...
Rick Gennings'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
-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
-1 votes
1 answer
53 views

If an area in 2D cannot be curved and finite is the same regarding the space of our pressumed 3D universe?

Is the sentence in the title right that our universe is infinite? And if so does it mean that stars are not evenly distributed along our universe but they all move from a populated centre to a fairly ...
Krešimir Bradvica's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
57 views

Does the Weyl tensor amount to tidal effects of gravity?

The Ricci tensor, for the spacetime surrounding the Earth, is zero, so the spacetime around the Earth is Ricci-flat. The Riemann tensor though is not zero since spacetime certainly is curved. This ...
Il Guercio's user avatar
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
18 votes
2 answers
3k views

How does spacetime curve around an object in superposition?

I'm trying to learn quantum mechanics and this is a question that came to mind. I tried searching for it online, but I couldn't find a good answer (or at least one I could understand). From what I ...
maniac's user avatar
  • 191
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
72 views

How to mathematically describe the process of spacetime curvature?

I guess as a result of the energy-momentum tensor $T_{\mu\nu}$ coupling to a flat Minkowski metric, $\eta_{\mu\nu}$, the flat metric can become that of a curved spacetime, $g_{\mu\nu}$. How can one ...
physics_2015's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
67 views

How would objects move in a linear gravitational field?

In General Relativity, gravity is described as the curvature of spacetime caused by mass. This curvature is often visualized as a straight path bending due to a warped surface. My question is: If, ...
elfeiin's user avatar
  • 87
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

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