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the gravitational field in a region of space does not tell you what created it.
Nobody is "worried" about the source, ..
Gravitation requires the presence of a second object, and the gravitational force on a "test" object is proportional to the mass of the "source" object.
..but everyone knows it has to exist. We have no evidence of a gravitational field with no mass at its centre.
I don't know JP. A charged particle moving in a circle, is that a geodesic? If it isn't, then it is a acceleration. And if it accelerates it must lose 'energy'. (Thinking of it as 'fields', also assuming light to not 'propagate', you should get shapes describing it instead of a motion.)
true Pete, but what it made me think about was actually electrons 'orbitals'.
A charged particle moving in a circle, is that a geodesic? If it isn't, then it is a acceleration. And if it accelerates it must lose 'energy'.
The laws of physics don’t require the existence of gravitational objects for gravitational waves to exist.
Or are you saying not to worry about the origin of the waves?
Quote from: beanyOr are you saying not to worry about the origin of the waves?Yes. Anytime I've ever had to calculate the force exerted on a particle I never had to know the source of the field. All I had to know was the field.
one body generates a field and it’s the field that interacts with objects to exert forces on them. So all we need to know, and all that needs to exist, is the field, not the source. The laws of physics don’t require the existence of gravitational objects for gravitational waves to exist.
In Einstein's theory of general relativity, gravity is treated as a phenomenon resulting from the curvature of spacetime. This curvature is caused by the presence of mass.
Ok, now I know what you mean, but, I do think you could have worded that better... confused for a moment thinking what other laws, if not those of physics, do you require to make G waves.
then me on earth may define a satellite as 'free falling' inside a gravitational field, but for the satellite itself there is no gravitational field to be measured
Quotethen me on earth may define a satellite as 'free falling' inside a gravitational field, but for the satellite itself there is no gravitational field to be measuredOh no there isn’t
It will be seen from these reflexions that in pursuing the general theory of relativity we shall be led to a theory of gravitation, since we are able to "produce" a gravitational field merely by changing the system of co-ordinates.
The observer on the satellite will note that he is accelerating towards a massive object, and deduce that he is therefore in a convergent gravitational field.
So you are saying that according to GR, gravitational fields exist in the absence of mass.
Now here's a fine mess, because one principle of all non-newtonian physics is that it must approximate to the newtonian at the mesoscopic level, because that is what we observe and we don't like arbitrary discontinuities in our theories.
So where does the mass of the bodies come from, in our carefully measured "Gm1m2/r^2" forces?
Can gravitation and inertia be identical? This question leads directly to the General Theory of Relativity. Is it not possible for me to regard the earth as free from rotation, if I conceive of the centrifugal force, which acts on all bodies at rest relatively to the earth, as being a "real" gravitational field of gravitation, or part of such a field? If this idea can be carried out, then we shall have proved in very truth the identity of gravitation and inertia. For the same property which is regarded as inertia from the point of view of a system not taking part of the rotation can be interpreted as gravitation when considered with respect to a system that shares this rotation. According to Newton, this interpretation is impossible, because in Newton's theory there is no "real" field of the "Coriolis-field" type. But perhaps Newton's law of field could be replaced by another that fits in with the field which holds with respect to a "rotating" system of co-ordinates? My conviction of the identity of inertial and gravitational mass aroused within me the feeling of absolute confidence in the correctness of this interpretation.