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Questions tagged [spacetime]

Within relativity (both special and general), changes of reference frames can change both the notions of space and of time, with one depending on the other as well. As a consequence, it is necessary to treat both concepts in a unified manner. Hence the term spacetime.

0 votes
0 answers
21 views

Extrinsic Curvature in a conformally-flat spacetime

I would appreciate if someone can confirm or correct my understanding of extrinsic-curvature (as in the ADM 3+1 decomposition of spacetime) when dealing with an asymptotically flat spacetime. I ...
AmnonJW's user avatar
6 votes
4 answers
601 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 ...
Zach's user avatar
  • 141
2 votes
0 answers
30 views

How does loop quantum gravity handle spacetimes which aren't globally hyperbolic, like the Kerr metric?

Loop quantum gravity assumes spacetime is globally hyperbolic. However, the interior of a Kerr black hole isn't globally hyperbolic, containing closed timelike curves. So, how are Kerr black holes ...
Zee's user avatar
  • 31
0 votes
1 answer
52 views

Length Contraction: is $t'$ or $t = 0$?

To demonstrate my confusion - let's say there is a rod traveling with velocity +v relative to S, and in S, the length of the rod is measured to be $L$. If I want to go from S to S', the frame where a ...
Emil Sriram's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
50 views

Action principle dependent on spacetime-topology?

Consider the Lagrangian density $$L(\phi, \nabla \phi, g) = g^{\mu \nu} \nabla_{\mu} \phi \nabla_{\nu} \phi$$ If one varies the action as usual, then one finds the equation $$\delta S = \int_{\mathcal{...
Octavius's user avatar
  • 761
-3 votes
3 answers
73 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
9 votes
4 answers
597 views

Understanding expansion of the Universe as things flying apart

Say that we have a Universe uniformly filled just with matter (let's not bring dark energy into this). And say that we fill it with very light particles (so that the gravitational interaction between ...
Negredol Nekaj's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
71 views

A few doubts regarding the geometry and representations of spacetime diagrams [closed]

I had a couple questions regarding the geometry of space-time diagrams, and I believe that this specific example in Hartle's book will help me understand. However, I am unable to wrap my head around ...
amansas's user avatar
  • 23
2 votes
1 answer
68 views

Confusion about local Minkowski frames

This is sort of a follow-up to the question I asked here:  Confusion about timelike spatial coordinates The important context is that we imagine a metric that, as $t\rightarrow\infty$, approaches the ...
Aidan Beecher's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
85 views

Confusion about timelike spatial coordinates

I'm pretty new to general relativity, and I'm self-studying it using Sean M. Carroll's text on the subject. In Section 2.7, he introduces the notion of closed timelike curves. He gives the example of ...
Aidan Beecher's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
174 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
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0 answers
42 views

Inflation in background free models of the universe

There are many authors who are attempting to construct a model of physics that doesn't rely on the objective existence of spacetime. This is part of the work in quantum gravity. This leads to things ...
Ben Sprott's user avatar
  • 1,420
2 votes
3 answers
54 views

What is the dual asymptotic spacetime of a CFT on a particular flat manifold?

According to AdS/CFT correspondence, the dual theory of a boundary CFT on flat spacetime is defined on an asymptotically AdS spacetime. The nature of the bulk spacetime depends on the topology of the ...
Sanjana's user avatar
  • 785
2 votes
1 answer
154 views

When you are in a gravitational field, do object far away get physically closer to you as you get closer to the mass?

An observer A is close to a black hole and an observer B one light year away. They are both remaining at constant radial distance from the black hole. A is at 2 Rs away from the center of the black ...
Zach's user avatar
  • 141
1 vote
0 answers
21 views

How to derive Feffermann-Graham expansion for AdS Vaidya geometries?

Introduction The Feffermann-Graham expansion for an asymptotically AdS spacetime [0] looks like Poincare AdS but with the flat space replaced by a more general metric i.e. $$ds^2=\frac{1}{z^2}(g_{\mu \...
Sanjana's user avatar
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