balta06 said:
Are you suggesting that I should study general relativity?
Well, that depends on what you want to do. Real gravity in the real universe seems to behave according to general relativity. Newtonian gravity has been experimentally falsified.
But if you want to toss around with mathematical theories about how you can generalise Newtonian mechanics to curved spaces (not space-times), which has nothing to do with our universe, but which might make for fun mathematics, then there's no point in looking into general relativity.
I also have one more question. Is there a book discussing the spherical astronomy in a more general setting? For instance, suppose that we have a manifold M with an embedded submanifold N and a people X living on the surface of N. How does X determine the locations of objects?
As you are building your own toy universe here, you are free to specify the laws of your toy universe.
I have the impression that you don't see a difference between mathematical physics, and theoretical physics. In mathematical physics, you are interested in the mathematical structures that go with certain laws and theories, and in order to explore that, you are free to change settings - knowing very well that this hasn't anything to do anymore with the "real universe", but changing the settings might help you understand better the mathematical structure of a certain theory. For instance, by changing the number of dimensions, or the metric, or something else, you can hope to get a better idea of what is "essential" and what not, in a certain structure. Your aim is not to "improve upon understanding real nature", your aim is to understand the mathematical structure of certain theories - whether they are correct or not.
In theoretical physics, people rather try to guess "how nature is". They try to guess deeper laws of nature. The verdict is the experiment.
So if you want to understand the natural phenomenon of gravity, then you are more like a theoretical physicist, and you want to study general relativity (and forget about Newton's law on manifolds). You might be interested in actual measurements and observations. If you are a mathematical physicist, and you want to learn more about the mathematical structure of Newton's law, then you forget about general relativity, and you go playing with Newton's law in different settings. You don't care about observations, you want to study a mathematical structure and its variations.