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webboffin
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Like water is displaced by a solid object.
Like water is displaced by a solid object.
There's no particular reason to believe that there is such a thing as the fabric of space. It's not part of the math, no experiment has ever been devised that might give a different result depending on whether it existed or not, and there's nothing that is better explained if it does exist than if it doesn't.
You'll see the word "fabric" used sometimes as a metaphor or analogy in non-mathematical descriptions of General Relativity, but that's just a metaphor; no one is saying that there's a real fabric out there that could be displaced.
What list of properties must something have to be considered a "fabric"?But space can be warped, bent and twisted by gravity so it has physical properties and dimensions.
But space can be warped, bent and twisted by gravity so it has physical properties and dimensions.
It is SPACETIME that is affected by the presence of mass, not just space. In SR and GR, they are coupled together. This is why trying to picture this as a "fabric" is inaccurate. An analogy can only go so far before it becomes nonsensical if one tries to take it seriously.
Zz.