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Robin Laurén asked the Naked Scientists: I am massively confused. Doesn't Einstein's theory of general relativity say something along the lines that there is no gravity, it's just curvature in spacetime due to objects in the universe? Why would Einstein coin a theory of Gravitational waves if gravity didn't exist? Are waves just curves that wobble? And do the gravitational waves detected by the LIGO wibbly wobbly detector disprove the existence of Einstein?What do you think?
Are waves just curves that wobble?
Mass tells space-time how to curve, and space-time tells mass how to move.
And do the gravitational waves detected by the LIGO wibbly wobbly detector disprove the existence of Einstein?
Robin Lauren asked the Naked Scientists:Are waves just curves that wobble?
late to this one but no. Einstein did not think of it as a geometry. He thought of it as a relativistic gravitational 'field'. In a similar way to how you can change your experience of a Electromagnetic field by your 'motion' relative it, a gravitational field also is observer dependent. It exist as long as you don't fall, as soon as you're in that free fall you negated it acting on you, locally defined. So he wanted to find a way to unify both into one field, as I understand it.
Did he ever come around to thinking of it as a geometry?
I do not agree with the idea that general relativity is geomterizing physics of a gravitational field. The concepts of physics have always been geometrical concepts and I cannot see why the gik field should be called more geometrical han f.i. the electromagnetic field or the distance between bodies in Newtonian mechanics. The notion probably comes from the fact that the mathematical origin of the gik[/dub] field is the Gauss-Riemann theory of the metrical continuum which we are wont to look at as part of geometry. I am convinced, however, that the distinction between geometrical and other kinds of fields is not logically founded.
Doesn't Einstein's theory of general relativity say something along the lines that there is no gravity, it's just curvature in spacetime due to objects in the universe?
Quote from: geordief on 09/10/2018 14:07:03Did he ever come around to thinking of it as a geometry?No. In fact he wrote to Lincoln Barnett on June 19, 1948, sayingQuoteI do not agree with the idea that general relativity is geomterizing physics of a gravitational field. The concepts of physics have always been geometrical concepts and I cannot see why the gik field should be called more geometrical han f.i. the electromagnetic field or the distance between bodies in Newtonian mechanics. The notion probably comes from the fact that the mathematical origin of the gik[/dub] field is the Gauss-Riemann theory of the metrical continuum which we are wont to look at as part of geometry. I am convinced, however, that the distinction between geometrical and other kinds of fields is not logically founded.
Were there any practical consequences to this disagreement?
Is it simply a matter of interpretation ?
When theoretical physicists explore possible versions of a quantum gravity do these interpretations assume a greater importance?
**clearly I can only assume when I have very little personal understanding of those theories....