General Relativity: gravitational waves

In summary, according to this expert, gravitational waves are waves that carry energy. They are created by objects that are moving close to each other. When two neutron stars move closer to each other, they lose mass, and this loss of mass is what causes the waves.
  • #1
HumanAxiom
9
0
Could you help explain this?

I know this is what gravity is, correct?

what does it mean when they say;
when a object emits gravitational waves mass should decrees.
and how exactly does the binary pulsar system PSR 1913+16 help explain this?
 
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  • #2
not all of gravity is good to picture as waves. waves are just a part of the picture.

Like with electricity and magnetism, a charge sitting still exerts attraction or repulsion force on surrounding charge---but these are static forces, not waves

but if you move the charge back and forth in an antenna it makes spreading ripples of push-pull that are electromagnetic waves

so a star sitting still just exerts force on surroundings, simple Newtonian picture works, no waves.

but if you bring another star close to it and let it move around and around the first one, then it sends out spreading waves. because the companion star is now on right side and now on left, now nearer now farther, etc.

so it is like an electric charge going around in a circular antenna, making waves.

NOW WAVES CARRY ENERGY, they can do work, they can rock your boat or whatever, even generate electricity, so this orbiting system of two stars is sending out waves which carry away energy, WHERE DOES THAT ENERGY COME FROM.

It comes from the two stars SPIRALING IN CLOSER TO EACH OTHER because when they are closer together they have less potential energy

energy is the ability to do work. if you have a brick on a pulley you can get it to do work as it is lowered (make the rope turn something)======the higher up the brick is, the more potential it has to do work

the farther apart two stars are the more potential they have to do work if you could tie rope and lower them together with a pulley------so as they get closer energy goes somewhere.

in the case of the two NEUTRON STARS you read about they spiral in closer and closer and the potential energy that they lose by getting closer goes into two things: it goes into speeding them up, and it goes into making waves.

the good thing about neutron stars is they are small and compact so they can spiral in close to each other and get to going very fast, so they become efficient at making vigorous energetic waves-----not slow flabby waves that hardly carry any energy at all like ordinary orbital motions make. do the rate of energy loss was large enough to be measurable (by the increased speed as the orbit tightened).
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Now comes the exciting part. If you take the same two neutron stars they HAVE MORE MASS WHEN THEY ARE FARTHER APART THAN THEY DO WHEN THEY ARE CLOSER

that is just the standard thing that Einstein figured out in 1905 about a hot cannonball. He figured out that the same cannonball would weigh more if it was heated up. And it's true.

What determines the mass of the whole system is not only the individual masses of the component pieces but the energy that is stored in the WHOLE SYSTEM. So if you want to know the total mass of a two-star system it is not just adding up the mass of each star in isolation. That doesn't give the right answer. You have to include the energy embodied in their relationship----how far apart, how they are moving (potential and kinetic energy)

and with a cannonball you can't just add up the masses of the individual atoms, you have to take account of HEAT energy kinetic and potential, motion, bond energy too. Adding up the masses of the atoms measured in isolation only gives an approximate answer. the real mass includes everything.

so as the two neutron stars spiral in towards each other over 10 or 20 years, they radiate away some energy by gravity waves and then, since they are closer now they have less potential energy, and therefore they have less MASS as a combined two-star system. I think that is what you were asking about, the loss of mass. I don't think the loss of mass is an especially clear way to look at it. the main thing is the slow leakage loss of energy as they spiral in.
 
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  • #3
Thank you so much! ^_^
the main reason i was reading about gravitational waves was because I'm trying to understand gravity and how it works, well how it works according to General Relativity.

But it seems Gravitational Waves doesn't quite answer my questions.

And from what i understand gravity is warps in the space-time fabric
and those warp ,from what i can gather, travel like waves so i assumed Gravitational Waves would hold some further understanding in what is gravity and what's these "warps" are, but they do not.
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I would like to ask another 3 question, if that's not a problem?..

1. what causes these warps? i was told in grade school it was with the planets rotation around its axis, but now, trying to do my own research in General Relativity i have found nothing of that sort...but that doesn't mean its wrong...just maybe its general understood?? But if that's the case how?

2. what are these warps really?

3. and i came across this description and i can't make much sense of it...if you could maybe help explain it;"When a mass is present in the above space-time it distorts it so that whilst it remains true that traveling through space causes you to travel through time, traveling through time now causes you to move (accelerate) through space. In other words just by existing, you are compelled to move through space - this is gravity."

so i deducted as time passes or moves forward we in since are moving through time by just existing.

so is it saying that us being in the 3 dimensions of space and then with duration of time we are, in-turn, moving in time this is gravity!? if thats, it what's the cause?

please help clarify!And thank you again
 
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What is General Relativity?

General Relativity is a theory of gravity developed by Albert Einstein in the early 20th century. It describes how massive objects in the universe interact with each other and how this interaction produces the force of gravity.

How does General Relativity explain gravitational waves?

General Relativity predicts that the acceleration of massive objects can create ripples in the fabric of space-time, known as gravitational waves. These waves travel at the speed of light and carry energy away from the source, causing objects to vibrate as they pass through.

How were gravitational waves first detected?

Gravitational waves were first detected in 2015 by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) when two black holes collided and produced a ripple in space-time. This discovery confirmed Einstein's prediction and opened up a new field of astronomy.

What are the potential applications of studying gravitational waves?

Studying gravitational waves can help us understand the behavior of massive objects in the universe, such as black holes and neutron stars. It can also provide insights into the origins of the universe and help us develop new technologies, such as more precise detectors for gravitational waves.

Is General Relativity the only theory of gravity?

No, there are other theories of gravity, such as Newton's theory of gravity and Einstein's own theory of general relativity. However, General Relativity has been extensively tested and is currently the most accurate and widely accepted theory of gravity.

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