Gravity and Light: Questions Explored

In summary: We don't have all the answers, we're constantly learning and expanding on our knowledge.In summary, General Relativity shows us that gravity doesn't act directly on mass as you learned in high school - it actually bends space and this causes light (which has no mass) to bend. There was a famous experiment almost 100years ago when stars were observed to move as their light passed very close to the sun (during an eclipse) which proved this theory.
  • #1
jobyts
227
64
Few questions:

1. Is gravity always proportional to the mass of the planet/star? Is there any other factor we consider when we determine the gravity of a distant star?

2. Does light bend only if it interacts with the gravity of a huge star, or,
the bend is visible with interaction huge stars, but happens with any small amount of gravity - but unable to detect with the current technology or our maths knowledge.

3. Can there be a possibility of so huge gravity (or mass) and it causes a halo around the star? (and no light comes out of it and we call it black hole, he...he...)

4. If gravity can affect photons, is there a possibility of mass for the photon which is so so negligible? Why do we reject any theory based on that (or, is there a mathematical proof that says photon has to be massless?)
 
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  • #2
jobyts said:
1. Is gravity always proportional to the mass of the planet/star? Is there any other factor we consider when we determine the gravity of a distant star?
Distance - the force of gravity is the mass of the object * the distance away - squared

2. Does light bend only if it interacts with the gravity of a huge star, or,
the bend is visible with interaction huge stars, but happens with any small amount of gravity - but unable to detect with the current technology or our maths knowledge.
No any mass bends light. In very senstive astronomical observations we have to calculate the effect of light being bent by the gravity of other planets (especially Jupiter - which is still pretty massive).

3. Can there be a possibility of so huge gravity (or mass) and it causes a halo around the star?
Yes it's called a gravitational lens. We can see halos or multiple images of very distant objects because a galaxy near us is acting as a giant lens.

4. If gravity can affect photons, is there a possibility of mass for the photon which is so so negligible? Why do we reject any theory based on that (or, is there a mathematical proof that says photon has to be massless?)
General relativity shows us that gravity doesn't act directly on mass as you learned in high school - it actually bends space and this causes light (which has no mass) to bend.
There was a famous experiment almost 100years ago when stars were observed to move as their light passed very close to the sun (during an eclipse) which proved this theory.
 
  • #3
mgb_phys said:
General relativity shows us that gravity doesn't act directly on mass as you learned in high school - it actually bends space and this causes light (which has no mass) to bend.
There was a famous experiment almost 100years ago when stars were observed to move as their light passed very close to the sun (during an eclipse) which proved this theory.

The experiment looks like a proof/observation of bending of light. If there any observable event for the bending of space? Or, is it a mathematically proved thing?
 
  • #4
jobyts said:
The experiment looks like a proof/observation of bending of light. If there any observable event for the bending of space? Or, is it a mathematically proved thing?

The point of the experiment is that if you say the light is bent by gravity as if it had a mass (from E=mc^2) and work out the bending angle you get half as much as GR's bending of space theory predicts.
The experiment was to measure how much it bends - the result was for the bending of space.

Of course philosphically you could say this doesn't prove the theory - it only proves that the real theory should predict the same result as GR. But that's true of the whole of science.
 

Related to Gravity and Light: Questions Explored

1. What is the relationship between gravity and light?

The relationship between gravity and light is complex and still not fully understood. However, according to Einstein's theory of general relativity, gravity is caused by the curvature of space and time by massive objects, while light travels through this curved space-time. This means that gravity can affect the path of light and cause it to bend.

2. How does gravity affect the speed of light?

Gravity does not directly affect the speed of light, which is considered to be a constant in a vacuum. However, gravity can affect the path of light, causing it to appear to slow down or speed up depending on the strength of the gravitational field it is passing through.

3. Can light be affected by both gravity and electromagnetism?

Yes, light can be affected by both gravity and electromagnetism. While gravity affects the path of light due to the curvature of space-time, electromagnetism affects the properties of light, such as its polarization and wavelength.

4. Why does light bend around massive objects like black holes?

According to Einstein's theory of general relativity, massive objects like black holes cause a distortion in space-time. Light follows the curvature of this distorted space-time, causing it to bend around the object instead of traveling in a straight line.

5. Is there any evidence that gravity can affect the speed of light?

Yes, there is evidence that gravity can affect the speed of light. One example is the observation of gravitational lensing, where the light from distant objects is bent by the gravity of massive objects in the foreground. This bending of light can cause the same object to appear at different locations in the sky, indicating that the speed of light has been affected by gravity.

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