shounakbhatta said:
Hello All,
Pertaining to General Relativity, what do we mean when we tell a space is flat or space is curved?
Is it that sum of the angles of a triangle = 180?
Or is it something else.
I was listening to a lecture of Prof.Susskind, when he takes a piece of paper, makes certain points on the paper and then folds it, up/down. He tells that this is not curved. He reasons that as because the distance between two neighboring points is still the same (when the paper is folded).Thanks and regards
"Curved" and "Flat" are not very precise when used in popularizations, but in the context of General Relativity, "curved" usually means that the Riemann curvature tensor vanishes.
The sum-of-angles of a triangle technique works to determine the flatness of Euclidean spatial slices, but the necessary concepts of angle do not translate well into the Minkowski geometry of space-time. For instance, if we replace "angle" with "rapidity" because angles add and rapdities also add, one must face up to the fact that the angle / rapidity between a beam of light and either a spacelike or timelike geodesic is infinite, while Euclidean angles are always between 0 and 2pi radians (or if you prefer 0 and 360 degrees).Setting the condition that parallel transport around a closed curve does not change the orientation of a vector is equivalent to the condition that the Riemann tensor vanishes and thus will work to determine the curvature of either Euclidean space or Minkowskian space-time, but it requires one to understand the concept of parallel transport.
There is a geometrical construction known as "Schild's ladder" that can provide a semi-intuitive geometrical way of defining parallel transport (at least as long as torsion is absent, which is presumed to be true in General Relativity). See
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Schild's_ladder&oldid=586460884
To use Schild's ladder one must have some formal or informal understanding of geodesics, specifically how to draw and extend a geodesic between two points (the points can be presumed to be close enough together so that said geodesic is unique), and also how to take the midpoint of a geodesic segment.
The underlying motivation of Schild's ladder is that given the absence of torsion, the sides of a quadrilateral whose opposing sides have equal lengths / lorentz intervals are "parallel", and that by drawaing an infinite number of such quadrilaterals, one can parallel transport a vector.
Is there any way to say that my table top is flat and the other one is curved?
Perhaps, but in the context of General relativity it is important to note that the intrinsic geometry is independent of whether or not the paper is folded. Thus, the concepts of flatness that is useful in general relativity will not change if you fold the paper.
See for instance the general wiki discussion of curvature
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Curvature&oldid=631099092
and note that the Gaussian curvature described in said article is the intrinsic sort which is useful in General Relativity. You will note that there are various different definition of "extrinsic curvature", but those are not applicable to general relativity, as they would require one to be "outside the universe" to observe, while the methods of intrinsic curvature give a number based on measurements we can actually perform.