0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
So their bent trajectory can be interpreted as gravity attracting that mass, or by space being bent.
Quote from: Halc So their bent trajectory can be interpreted as gravity attracting that mass, or by space being bent. ...or as gravity attracting that mass in a way that is most simply described by the concept of the bending of space?
I tend to think "visually" (possibly because my "maths" has progressed little beyond dactylonomy) and I find it difficult to visualise bent space.
Two black holes spinning around each other, faster & faster...converge...beep!It sends ripples of gravitational waves out into space, Right?A pebble/stone thrown in a pond, generates ripples.Hence even though Water being transparent & tasteless it's still a Substance/Medium.If those gravitational waves are travelling through space, is not Space a medium or substance of sorts???
Are G waves travelling thru a gravitational force field in space & not just simply space itself?
Is there a grav field all over n evrywher in space, even in super voids?
P.S. - n Y did or rather wen did Einstein say if u remuv d earth below our feet, v wuld xperience free fallin???Dat dosnt sound rite, Right?Y wud v or an object free fall, fall is downwards rite, but no up & down in space...y won't v or d object just float freely in space?
PS - freefallin still doesn't sound rite 2 mee!I have been brainwashed since childhud 2 attribute fallin = goin down...Freely Floating seems just rite, but den again...Ain't ne1 elses prob, juz mine.
Richard Wolfson, “Simply Einstein”, uses the term “free-float” rather than free fall; the meaning is the same, but as he is writing for lay people, he considers it aids visualisation in the case of objects that are not obviously “falling”.
Does gravity attract masses in an existing space, or does it curve the space between them?The answer to this question is much more complex than meets the eye?
Yeah...You do target certain people .
Now then , seeing as how MAINSTREAM science allows that the universe was much denser and slower in the deep past , the logical extension of that is the opposite . In other words , the trend I described . As far as the "Vector of time" goes , that springs directly from Relativity , which is mainstream enough for me .
As this universe ages , time will pass ever faster . Eventually , it will be infinitely fast
Addendum : These distortions have an effect upon all matter and energy entrained therein , and are likely responsible for the ironically named illusion of "Dark-Matter" .
Another thing here ; this is a discussion forum , not a test by some hostile professor . In otherwords , it is here for discussion and debate .
Time to stop sabotaging other posters , and let them enjoy their conversations !
It can do both. BTW you're referring to spacetime curvature, not space curvature. You can have a gravitational field without spacetime curvature. An example is a uniform gravitational field. Spacetime curvature is the same thing as gravitational tidal forces. A uniform gravitational field has zero spacetime curvature,
[That is interesting.Could you expand on that at all?How would a uniform gravitational field manifest its quality of producing no spacetime curvature?
There is no spacetime curvature in a uniform gravitational field. It's a myth that all gravity is a curvature in spacetime. Curved spacetime is the same thing as tidal forces and a uniform gravitational field has no tidal forces.
What might be an example of a uniform gravitational field?