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My initial question would be: Are you proposing that it is spacetime that is waving; and if so is it waving in a higher dimensional "reality"?
For a photon as wavelength increases then energy decreases so there is less oomph. If a spacetime wave had negative pressure then this decrease in energy would have to be inversely proportional to the strength of this negative pressure.
Amplitude is a problematic concept. Does a quantum mechanical wave have amplitude?
As such, gravity is an inward curvature of such space-time,
An “inward curvature” with respect to what? Are you visualising spacetime as being curved relative to higher dimensions?
there are two types of gravity, both exactly the same in every way
You might care to comment on the following, from Dr C Baird:
there are two types of gravity, both exactly the same in every wayIf they are the same in every way, why are there two of them?
Spacetime is the underlying universe itself. Anytime a writer says something like this, he is giving you an analogy only. If a spacetime is curved, it means that identical clocks sitting at different points in the spacetime will tick at different rates, even if ever so slightly."
At the moment I am studying Heisenberg's picture of quantum mechanics. I may have more to add.
“….if a spacetime is curved, it means that identical clocks sitting at different points in the spacetime will tick at different rates, even if ever so slightly."
I'll tell you a little trick that helps makes sense of spacetime. Any time spacetime is curved, it makes one direction act differently from the other directions. Put roughly, spacetime curvature makes one direction special. Anytime you have a reference frame where one direction is special, you have spacetime curvature. It is the curvature itself which makes one direction special.
Any time spacetime is curved, it makes one direction act differently from the other directions.