Peter quotes are from Wikipedia this article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_relativity fourth paragraph.
I don't mean that SR(Special Relativity) is a competitor theory to GR(General Relativity). What I am trying to show is that with both SR and GR perspective we can see a proportional...
This is something I am interested in. I imagine possible mass of a neutrino as a pure energy interacting with Spacetime. Observing this interaction could shed light on lots of aspects not only on quantum level.
Thanks to all of you again for your time and input. I'm going to sleep, been up all night. Totally enjoyed company of people on this board. Looking forward to coming back later on. I hope you can tolerate few more questions :-)
Thanks, for interesting insight, and correcting me on Isotopes. I will look more into Isotopes as it is interesting how addition of neutrons affect or not affect relative balance in atom. Unstable Isotopes are even more fascinating.
"In general relativity, a geodesic generalizes the notion of a "straight line" to curved spacetime. Importantly, the world line of a particle free from all external, non-gravitational force, is a particular type of geodesic. In other words, a freely moving or falling particle always moves along...
With the third question I hope I will nut insult anybody:-)
Why (if I correctly understand present model) is electrons angular momentum one of the deciding factors that electrons not fall on proton despite having an opposite charge. Same applies to positron in antimatter.
When it comes to...
I would like rephrase the first question: Is the Spacetime with it's deformed (imaginable) curvature deciding factor that causes gravity?
Does mass of Earth play no other role than deforming Space time thus creating a Gravity well?
Does Earth's matter (fundamental forces + energy of whole...
Thanks phinds for describing the Time passage in more accurate way than I did.I skimmed through Wikipedia and read about time Gravitational time dilation.
Reply to second question. Let point B not be an edge of the universe but be 46 bil light years away - what they call the edge of an observable Universe. My question still remains same: Will object pass through the wormhole literally instantly, or with a delay of measurable time?
Wormholes are...
I would like to thank you Mister T, and phinds for a reply in such a short time :-)
Mister T I apologise if misunderstood you, but if I understand you correctly, then I would like to point out to you that there is an organisation in Britain that corrects time on Satellites because difference in...
Second question: If we hypothetically make a wormhole from the centre of the universe to the very edge, then pass an object through it. Will object pass through the wormhole literally instantly, or with a delay of measurable time?
Hello, I'm not an Academic, I love physics as a casual hobby. So I have few questions that stuck in my mind. Here is the first one:
By Einsteins General Relativity everything including us stuck to Earth by gravity. Earths mass bends the Spacetime. The gravity means: deformed space is pushing us...