Does gravity indeed travel in waves?

In summary: If it travels in waves, how gravity isn't subject to thermodynamics. That is to say, a set amount of gravity isn't diluted by how many objects or how much mass it holdsGravity isn't subject to thermodynamics because energy isn't exchanged between objects in a gravitational field. This is why you can stand on a mountain and feel very little impact from the mass of the mountain above you: the energy of the mountain is being stored up as potential energy in the rocks below you, but because the rocks are stationary and the mountain doesn't move, the energy is never released.In summary, gravitational waves travel at the speed of light, and they can be
  • #1
Gaz1982
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A massive star has a huge gravitational influence far far away from itself.

It goes Supernova.

Does the gravitational effect it has on its most outer objects still remain until the change in gravitational attraction has reached them at c?

If so then does the gravity indeed travel in waves?
 
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  • #2
Until mass ejected by the supernova goes past a remote object, the remote object sees no change in the gravitational attraction from the center of mass of the mass that was, and still is, there.
 
  • #3
Gaz1982 said:
A massive star has a huge gravitational influence far far away from itself.

It goes Supernova.

Does the gravitational effect it has on its most outer objects still remain until the change in gravitational attraction has reached them at c?

If so then does the gravity indeed travel in waves?


It's a field, and is limited by c. it's static on it's own.

Yes it takes time for the change to reach whatever. The moon is 1 light second away. If the moon disapered it would take one second for that change to have physical significance here on Earth.
 
  • #4
Thank you

But that means that gravity travels independent from its source.

How? Can someone elaborate
 
  • #5
Gaz1982 said:
Thank you

But that means that gravity travels independent from its source.

How? Can someone elaborate
Do you think that if you shine a flashlight at the moon and then turn off the flashlight, the beam of photons heading for the moon will suddenly disappear because you turned of the flashlight?
 
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  • #6
phinds said:
Do you think that if you shine a flashlight at the moon and then turn off the flashlight, the beam of photons heading for the moon will suddenly disappear because you turned of the flashlight?

No I don't.

But I see light. I can observe its passing.

I'm just trying to picture gravity "travelling" in such a fashion
 
  • #7
Gaz1982 said:
No I don't.

But I see light. I can observe its passing.

I'm just trying to picture gravity "travelling" in such a fashion
Does picturing ripples on the surface of a pond help?
 
  • #8
bapowell said:
Does picturing ripples on the surface of a pond help?

No. I can see them

Could this traveling gravity be detected?
 
  • #9
phinds said:
Until mass ejected by the supernova goes past a remote object, the remote object sees no change in the gravitational attraction from the center of mass of the mass that was, and still is, there.
...which actually happens right after a time consistent with c-speed propagation, since the first ejecta to go past are in the form of radiation emitted by the SN event !
- not very satisfying I suppose but still... Or is this misconstrued ?
 
  • #10
Gaz1982 said:
Could this traveling gravity be detected?

Yes. That's what gravitational waves are. We have already detected them indirectly (in the binary pulsar observations), and we expect to detect them directly eventually.

Note, however, that this "traveling gravity" is not the same thing as what you ask about in your OP. In the scenario in your OP, the gravity felt by an observer at a distance from the supernova only changes when mass or radiation ejected by the supernova passes him on its way out. Nothing has to "travel" to him; the change is purely local.
 
  • #11
wabbit said:
...which actually happens right after a time consistent with c-speed propagation, since the first ejecta to go past are in the form of radiation emitted by the SN event !
- not very satisfying I suppose but still... Or is this misconstrued ?

I'm perplexed by 2 things

1. How fast gravity travels

2. If it travels in waves, how gravity isn't subject to thermodynamics. That is to say, a set amount of gravity isn't diluted by how many objects or how much mass it holds
 
  • #12
PeterDonis said:
Yes. That's what gravitational waves are. We have already detected them indirectly (in the binary pulsar observations), and we expect to detect them directly eventually.

Note, however, that this "traveling gravity" is not the same thing as what you ask about in your OP. In the scenario in your OP, the gravity felt by an observer at a distance from the supernova only changes when mass or radiation ejected by the supernova passes him on its way out. Nothing has to "travel" to him; the change is purely local.

But the decrease in mass or at least the spread of the mass of the Star would alter the orbit
 
  • #13
Gaz1982 said:
1. How fast gravity travels

You need to first get clear about what "gravity" is and what aspects of it can "travel" at all. If by "gravity" you mean the Newtonian "force" of gravity produced by a static object, that doesn't "travel" at all; it's a static force. (And this view of gravity as a "force" isn't really correct in GR anyway; it's just an approximation that works in certain scenarios, but doesn't give a full picture of what "gravity" is.) But if you think of "gravity" as spacetime curvature, then gravity "traveling" just means changes in spacetime curvature propagating. Those changes in spacetime curvature propagating are gravitational waves, and they propagate at the speed of light.

Gaz1982 said:
2. If it travels in waves, how gravity isn't subject to thermodynamics. That is to say, a set amount of gravity isn't diluted by how many objects or how much mass it holds

I'm not sure what you are trying to say here.
 
  • #14
Gaz1982 said:
the decrease in mass or at least the spread of the mass of the Star would alter the orbit

Yes, after the ejected mass passes the object in orbit on its way out. Up until that time, the object's orbit does not change--all of the mass is still inside the orbit, so it all still acts the same as far as the orbit of the object is concerned. (In this particular scenario, "gravity" in GR works the same as Newtonian gravity does.)
 
  • #15
PeterDonis said:
You need to first get clear about what "gravity" is and what aspects of it can "travel" at all. If by "gravity" you mean the Newtonian "force" of gravity produced by a static object, that doesn't "travel" at all; it's a static force. (And this view of gravity as a "force" isn't really correct in GR anyway; it's just an approximation that works in certain scenarios, but doesn't give a full picture of what "gravity" is.) But if you think of "gravity" as spacetime curvature, then gravity "traveling" just means changes in spacetime curvature propagating. Those changes in spacetime curvature propagating are gravitational waves, and they propagate at the speed of light.
I'm not sure what you are trying to say here.
Ok

A Star has a fixed mass and therefore a definable gravitational pull. But that pull is not diluted whether it has 1 orbiting planet or 100.

The net "force" is the same
 
  • #16
PeterDonis said:
Yes, after the ejected mass passes the object in orbit on its way out. Up until that time, the object's orbit does not change--all of the mass is still inside the orbit, so it all still acts the same as far as the orbit of the object is concerned. (In this particular scenario, "gravity" in GR works the same as Newtonian gravity does.)

Are waves not dispersed with the Supernova as the mass of the remaining Star is decreased
 
  • #17
Gaz1982 said:
A Star has a fixed mass and therefore a definable gravitational pull. But that pull is not diluted whether it has 1 orbiting planet or 100.

Yes, this is true.

Gaz1982 said:
Are waves not dispersed with the Supernova as the mass of the remaining Star is decreased

No. At least, not in the idealized case of a spherically symmetric explosion; all of the mass lost by the star is carried away by ordinary matter and radiation that is ejected. If the explosion is not symmetric, some gravitational waves may be emitted, but the energy carried away by them will be miniscule compared to the mass/energy carried away by ejection of mass and ordinary radiation.
 
  • #18
PeterDonis said:
Yes, this is true

This is what confuses me when people say gravity is measurable. It's measurable yet infinite.

A gravitational field could hold a theoretically infinite number of objects and its capacity for more is unblemished.

This seems at odds with how I understand thermodynamic systems
 
  • #19
Sorry just realized, the respective centre of mass relationships the various orbiters will have with Star do in fact have an increasing effect the more mass there is
 
  • #20
Gaz1982 said:
A gravitational field could hold a theoretically infinite number of objects and its capacity for more is unblemished.

Perhaps the problem here is that you are thinking of the field as having to "hold" each object separately. It doesn't. All it does is create spacetime curvature, and it only has to do that once. All the objects "held" in the field are simply responding to the same spacetime curvature, which they do anyway--that is, they move through whatever spacetime geometry there is, whether there's a gravitating mass there or not.

Gaz1982 said:
This seems at odds with how I understand thermodynamic systems

How so?
 
  • #21
Gaz1982 said:
This is what confuses me when people say gravity is measurable. It's measurable yet infinite.

A gravitational field could hold a theoretically infinite number of objects and its capacity for more is unblemished.

This seems at odds with how I understand thermodynamic systems

Gravity waves is a form of radiated energy. Gravity field is an effect on geometry. One would have to obey thermo dynamics, the other has nothing to do with it.
 
  • #22
Gaz1982 said:
It's measurable yet infinite.
Not sure how you got that idea but it's certainly not true. Perhaps Peter's post directly above has clarified it for you?
 

1. What is the theory behind the idea of gravity waves?

The theory of gravity waves is based on Einstein's theory of general relativity, which states that massive objects in space create ripples in the fabric of space-time. These ripples, or waves, are what we perceive as gravity.

2. How do we detect gravity waves?

Gravity waves are detected using specialized instruments called interferometers. These devices measure tiny changes in the distance between two points caused by passing gravitational waves.

3. Are there different types of gravity waves?

Yes, there are two types of gravity waves: gravitational waves and gravitational radiation. Gravitational waves are the ripples in space-time that are caused by accelerating objects, while gravitational radiation is the energy that is carried by these waves.

4. Can gravity waves travel through all types of matter?

Gravity waves can travel through any type of matter, including solid objects. However, they are not affected by matter in the same way that other types of waves, such as sound waves, are.

5. What is the significance of detecting gravity waves?

Detecting gravity waves would provide evidence for the existence of gravitational waves, which would confirm Einstein's theory of general relativity. It would also open up new possibilities for studying the universe, such as observing events like black hole mergers and gaining a better understanding of the structure of space-time.

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