I cannot understand a word you are saying
Oh dear, I read this yesterday and it doesn't make any more sense to me today:
darashayda said:
What I mean by the metric is an invariant metric
Invariant metric? Invariant with respect to what?
darashayda said:
that satisfies the usual tensorial transformations.
You can stipulate that an
equation be "satisfied", but I've never seen anyone stipulate that a
transformation be "satisfied". And what are these "usual tensorial transformations"?
darashayda said:
Not all functions can support that, only a few to my knowledge e.g. the euclidean length.
A function can have a "support", namely the subset of the domain where it takes on nonzero values, but I have no idea you mean here.
darashayda said:
You may perturb a tensor to still act as a compliant vector
Again, "compliant vector" is not a standard term in mathematical English, so I again I have no idea what you are talking about. Is this perhaps a loose translation of a term you saw in a book in French?
darashayda said:
to be a solution to the equations
What equations?
darashayda said:
but the question is can you perturb the tensor ARBITRARILY close to its original value.
I thought you were proposing to perturb something
away from an initial state!
darashayda said:
Best I can see you can perturb all the tensors but they are no longer a tensor they are a matrix of some kind and will not conform to the transformation rules
For perturbation of a mathematical object of type T to be well defined, it should result in a new object of type T, sure, but I don't see why you believe that the perturbations discussed in differential geometry are ill-defined.
darashayda said:
nor to the invariance requirements.
What invariance requirements? Invariance with respect to what?
darashayda said:
In other words I can take the diff equation solutions; add a little hack function
"hack" function?
darashayda said:
as in the case of the WEAK FORCE/ENERGY computations,
There is a "weak-field approximation" to gtr, which you could reasonably call "low energy approximation" or "small curvature approximation", but there is no "weak force approximation".
darashayda said:
But could I perturb the tensors, with arbitrarily close amounts to their original values, and satisfy the equations 100%.
Whereas equation (10) is only 54% satisfied?
(Sorry if that sounds a bit sarcastic, but I'm trying to convey to you the poor impression which your drastic and protracted abuse of language makes.)
darashayda said:
Lets say I have a solution to Einstein equations, then add a little perturbation to the solutions and plug them back in and walla I get all the equalities satisfied without any error factor.
At least now I can infer that you are
not after all reading books in French :-/
Dara, seriously now:
For all I know it is
possible that you are trying to ask a perfectly sensible question, but if that is the case, at this point I have grave doubts about your ability to make yourself understood until you have learned more of the standard language used in the gtr literature.
The only analogy I can use to convey what reading your questions above was like, would be hearing a sports announcer say "Well, the Babe really batted the old puck around the golf rink in the Superbow today, scoring billions and billions over pair, but we knew it was all over when Ali knocked down the warning flag with a wild drive to center field, leaving the Giants in command of the Cup".