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I'm still not sure I understand the concept we're discussing Gem Sometimes I think I do but then, just as sudden, I feel that I lost all sight of it again.
Are you thinking that the geodesics might look the same at a far spot in space, as it does inside the middle Geezer? I had that disturbing feeling too yesterday thinking of it, like a flat paper (two dimensional) with mass creating the three dimensions we see. Then mass could make a 3D description of a 2D space..
Ah well. Prosaic is cool too And I can proudly say that I'm one step behind My view is turning into an Copernican one )
Just to repeat my previous post on this topic, I think that bending of space-time, and thus time dilation, is caused by mass. Gravity is an effect of bent space-time, not the other way round. And mass bends space-time
I saw an explanation on it somewhere where every 'bit' of matter was treated as having, that is if I remember right now, an equal effect on every other bit? I think it was a Newtonian concept though? But it came to the conclusion that in the middle they would 'negate' the 'attraction', or as we say the 'bending of space'? Hyperphysics takes this approach when digging a hole to the problem.
As for the metric tensor JP? Want to explain how you think for us more , ah, solid ones there? No, not 'thick headed' solid I said. By 'curvature involves derivatives' you would then mean that? It measures difference instead of magnitude for those points in space? Or am I getting it all wrong? That's a subtle one JP
If it helps, try to imagine that instead of being solid, the earth was made out a big sphere of liquid (which is probably true near the centre anyway. If you were at the centre you would be crushed by the pressure of all the mass but still feel no gravity.
Even if things "curve" the same way at the center of the earth (since you're experiencing no net gravity), the entire space is squashed down. Think of a piece of graph paper in deep space. As you move down towards the center of the earth, it distorts because of the curvature and gets squashed, so it's no longer flat and the lines aren't parallel to each other. At the center of the earth, it's flat again and all the lines are parallel but it's been squashed to a smaller size