gabriel.dac said:
@PeterDonis your answer makes sense. If someone else was traveling almost at the speed of light, would it affect my mass? No, that wouldn't make sense :p
The theory of relativity is quite complex, when you think you fully understand you, you find out you don't.
@Nugatory that doesn't answer his main question. Would the space time curvature increase?
Space time curvature is a rank 4 tensor
Because of its a complex structure, one can't directly compare curvatures to decide if one is greater or lesser than another, so the question doesn't really have an answer as it is asked. This is similar to the way that one cannot compare complex numbers to determine which is "greater" and which is "lesser".
I assume the OP is assuming the curvature tensor is a single real number - this is not the case. Because it is not the case, there's no unique way to rank-order curvature tensors.
The details below are overkill, but it may be helpful to describe what the structure of the (Riemann) curvature tensor is. (There are several curvature tensors, the Riemann is the most complete).
One can think of the Riemann , a rank 4 tensor, as a 4x4x4x4 hypercube which has 256 cells , each cell which has a place for a number. Each number measures one "component" of the curvature.
The Riemann curvature tensor has a high degree of symmetry. Because of this symmetry (google for Biancci identities if you want the exact details), only 36 of these 256 cells have non-zero numbers, the remaning cells contain zeroes.
There are only 21 unique values, and only 20 degrees of freedom. (There are less degrees of freedom than unique values because of a constraint equation).