B Questions about space and matter

Click For Summary
The discussion centers on whether matter creates space or if space exists independently. Some participants argue that space cannot exist without matter, aligning with general relativity's view that spacetime is influenced by mass and energy. The concept of space as merely an attribute of matter is debated, with emphasis on the need for measurable consequences to support such claims. Hypothetical scenarios about matter manifesting without space are deemed unproductive, as they violate established physical laws. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the complexities of defining the relationship between matter and spacetime.
  • #31
Twinduck said:
Another way to ask is is space an attribute of matter, or is it just something matter can occupy and shape? Intuitively I am inclined to think the former.

This is somehow related to Mach's principle (at least in Einstein's reading): Are all forms of gravitational fields, the spacetime metric, and the inertia of bodies, fully determined by the masses of the universe? A nice historical description of this problem was given by Janssen:
https://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/4377/
See particular section 5. Fourth attempt: Mach’s principle and cosmological constant.

Einstein initially hoped that Mach's principle holds in GR, but it was soon showed by DeSitter that GR allows for a solution with vanishing matter density, while at the same time a single test body retains its inertia. Einstein was not convinced, so he wrote to DeSitter in 1917:

Einstein said:
It would be unsatisfactory, in my opinion, if a world without matter were possible. Rather, it should be the case that the ##g_{\mu\nu}## -field is fully determined by matter and cannot exist without the latter. This is the core of what I mean by the requirement of the relativity of inertia.

Anyway, there was nothing wrong with DeSitter's solution, which led Einstein (among other reasons) to abandon Mach's principle, so he wrote in 1954:

Einstein said:
In my view one should no longer speak of Mach’s principle at all. It dates back to the time in which one thought that the “ponderable bodies” are the only physically real entities and that all elements of the theory which are not completely determined by them should be avoided. (I am well aware of the fact that I myself was long influenced by this idée fixe)
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #32
Histspec said:
it was soon showed by DeSitter that GR allows for a solution with vanishing matter density, while at the same time a single test body retains its inertia
De Sitter didn't have to show that: flat Minkowski spacetime is also such a solution. (So is Schwarzschild's vacuum solution, which was published in 1916, the first solution to be discovered, but nobody understood that at the time--this solution was only thought to be valid for the spacetime surrounding an ordinary non-rotating planet or star, and the fact that it can also describe a black hole was not realized for another two decades.)

What de Sitter showed (that Einstein didn't expect) was that adding the cosmological constant to the field equations still allowed solutions with nonzero spacetime curvature but no matter, in which test bodies retain inertia. Einstein had hoped that would not be the case, as Janssen remarks in the paper you reference.
 
  • Like
Likes PeroK and Histspec
  • #33
Twinduck said:
…….

The question is does matter "create" space(time)?….
I think that solving this guestion honestly is behind relativity framework, and needs deeper quantum gravity theory. For example:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causal_dynamical_triangulation
 
  • #34
PeterDonis said:
What de Sitter showed (that Einstein didn't expect) was that adding the cosmological constant to the field equations still allowed solutions with nonzero spacetime curvature but no matter, in which test bodies retain inertia. Einstein had hoped that would not be the case, as Janssen remarks in the paper you reference.
Yes, I should have added that DeSitter's vacuum solution is related to Einstein's modified field equations that include the cosmological constant. Anyway, the point is that GR solutions such as this contributed, at least in the long term, to Einstein's abandonment of his idea quoted above (inspired by Mach's principle), that the possibility of a world without matter is unsatisfactory and that the ##g_{\mu\nu}##-field cannot exist without matter....
 
Last edited:
  • #35
Histspec said:
GR solutions such as this contributed, at least in the long term, to Einstein's abandonment of his idea quoted above (inspired by Mach's principle), that the possibility of a world without matter is unsatisfactory and that the ##g_{\mu\nu}##-field cannot exist without matter....
Yes, agreed.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
1K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
3K
  • · Replies 20 ·
Replies
20
Views
2K
  • · Replies 16 ·
Replies
16
Views
2K
Replies
8
Views
3K
  • · Replies 25 ·
Replies
25
Views
719
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
2K