Do Gravitons Attract Other Gravitons?

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As the title suggests, I'm wondering if gravitons feel the pull of other gravitons. And secondly, if a singularity emits gravitons, how do the gravitons get out of the event horizon to pull in other matter?
 
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Yes they do. The question is equivalent to asking whether gravity gravitates and the answer is yes.

Sometimes we ignore this effect (b/c if itself interaction its going to be loop supressed and small in a flat background) but it has to be there in the full picture and this sort of physics does become important at some scale..
 
mjacobsca said:
And secondly, if a singularity emits gravitons

It doesn't. A gravitating object does not emit gravitons, just as a charged object doesn't glow (emit photons).
 
the fact that gravity IS self interacting made it's formulation difficult,,,via Einstein's tensor.


And secondly, if a singularity emits gravitons, how do the gravitons get out of the event horizon to pull in other matter?

Gravity is present before the event horizon forms. Once the star, for example, collapses beyond the critical circumference where the event horizon forms, only random radiation leaks out...via virtual particle formation just outside the horizon...
 
Gravity is present before the event horizon forms. Once the star, for example, collapses beyond the critical circumference where the event horizon forms, only random radiation leaks out...via virtual particle formation just outside the horizon

Does this imply that the gravitational field once formed is frozen? What about the evidence that Jupiter's field changes with its motion and moves at the speed of light? What about the possibility that gravitons are virtual and exist for only an instant?
 
Insights auto threads is broken atm, so I'm manually creating these for new Insight articles. Towards the end of the first lecture for the Qiskit Global Summer School 2025, Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Olivia Lanes (Global Lead, Content and Education IBM) stated... Source: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/quantum-entanglement-is-a-kinematic-fact-not-a-dynamical-effect/ by @RUTA
If we release an electron around a positively charged sphere, the initial state of electron is a linear combination of Hydrogen-like states. According to quantum mechanics, evolution of time would not change this initial state because the potential is time independent. However, classically we expect the electron to collide with the sphere. So, it seems that the quantum and classics predict different behaviours!

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