PeterDonis
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More precisely, that the normalized "acceleration" of the volume--the second derivative of the volume with respect to time, divided by the volume--is negative. That means the volume, if it starts from "rest" (zero rate of change with time), will decrease at a rate that increases with time.Angelika10 said:they write, that a volume of a small ball of testparticles will decrease in time. And that's the basic meaning of "gravity attracts".
The Ricci tensor does not describe "mass". It describes density of stress-energy. For the simple case of a perfect fluid, the Ricci tensor--more precisely, the piece of it that determines the (negative) "acceleration" of the volume described above--will be ##\rho + 3 p##, where ##\rho## is the energy density of the fluid and ##p## is the pressure. So positive #\rho + 3p## means the "acceleration" of the volume is negative--"attractive" gravity. Note that this is for an observer who is inside the fluid, observing the behavior of a small ball of test particles that is also inside the fluid.Angelika10 said:If I the mass is increased, will the volume increase or decrease because of the additional mass?
Where is this metric tensor coming from?Angelika10 said:can the metric tensor help? diag(B, -A, -r², -r²sin(theta))