Hi, I’m back after a while.. I took some days off to read about gravitational waves and other phenomena in physics, and I have a new question related with gravitational waves. I decided to post it in this same thread, but I think that maybe it could be valid to start a fresh new thread about this. Anyway, since I already have many threads open, I’ll leave it here:
Doesn’t the prediction of gravitational waves implies the emission of some kind of energy? I came to this idea with the analogy of the electromagnetic waves produced by a moving electric charge. For a moving electron for example, energy is emitted through photons (am I right?). What about the movement of mass? I don’t mean to talk about the emission of a particle (like the already mentioned graviton). I just wonder if a gravitational wave has intrinsic energy. And what about conservation of energy in a planetary system? For example, does the orbital movement of the Earth around the sun produce gravitational waves (theoretically)? I think it should. In that case, isn’t it an implication of the conservation of energy that the Earth should slow down or the radius of the orbit should be reduced?
I confess that, by bringing the electromagnetic wave analogy, I feel suspicious of being wrong by trying to mix the gravitational laws of General Relativity with quantum physics (which I understand are, ‘til the date, unmixable), so maybe that is not the best analogy for my idea. However, I can’t help to associate the existence of a GW with a form of energy, and what consequences could that have regarding specifically the reduction of distance between the Earth and the sun.
Thanks again and best regards,