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Does relativistic mass curve space-time, i.e., does relativistic mass affect the gravitational field of an object?
The discussion revolves around the relationship between relativistic mass and space-time curvature, particularly whether relativistic mass influences the gravitational field of an object. Participants explore theoretical implications, observational perspectives, and specific scenarios such as neutron stars and black holes.
Participants express differing views on the role of relativistic mass in gravitational effects and space-time curvature, indicating that multiple competing perspectives remain without consensus.
Limitations include the observer-dependent nature of relativistic mass and the complexities involved in transitioning between Newtonian and relativistic frameworks in gravitational calculations.
So we can not say, what would have really happened, we can only say, what would an observer observe. Do correct me if I have missed something...
dst said:Does the additional relativistic mass cause it to collapse into a black hole?
Mentz114 said:mitesh9:If two observers watching the same event, saw different outcomes to the same experiment, that would be a problem. Usually different observers will see events happening on different time scales, but they must see the same outcome or else there would a contradiction.
For instance, the Lorentz transformation 'explains' why different inertial observers always see the same outcome to an EM experiment.
Yes. In fact MTW state that relativistic mass is the source of gravity.redtree said:Does relativistic mass curve space-time, i.e., does relativistic mass affect the gravitational field of an object?