What energy term determines gravity in GR?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the energy terms that determine gravity in General Relativity (GR), exploring the roles of mass, energy, momentum, and pressure as described by the stress-energy tensor. Participants examine the implications of these concepts in both theoretical and practical contexts, including the behavior of photons and electromagnetic fields.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that the curvature of space is influenced by photons, but argue that the effect is negligible due to low density.
  • Others contend that energy is observer-dependent, specifically referencing the stress-energy tensor as the source of gravity.
  • There is a discussion about whether "pressure" in the stress-energy tensor is a key component in causing gravity, with some suggesting that energy and momentum also contribute significantly.
  • A participant questions the validity of using the relativistic energy-momentum relationship in the context of GR, particularly regarding photons near massive bodies.
  • Another participant proposes a method to construct the stress-energy tensor using wave quantities, raising questions about the appropriateness of substituting certain variables.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the contributions of mass, energy, momentum, and pressure to gravitational effects, indicating that multiple competing perspectives remain without consensus.

Contextual Notes

Some claims rely on specific interpretations of relativistic principles and the definitions of energy and momentum, which may not be universally accepted. The discussion also touches on the limitations of applying special relativity concepts directly to general relativity scenarios.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those studying general relativity, electromagnetic theory, or the interplay between energy and gravity in theoretical physics.

kmarinas86
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The relativistic relativistic energy–momentum relationship is:

E^2 = \left(pc\right)^2 + \left(m_0c^2\right)^2

The relativistic energy (for a mass) is:

E = \gamma m_0c^2

It has been said that the curvature of space is contributed to by photons, not just mass. However:

  • The curvature of space produced by a photon field is virtually undetectable as photons are simply not packed dense enough.
  • The ability for a photon to follow a curvs ed path is based primarily on the mass of the celestial objects. Doubling the energy of a photon only does not double this curvature and indeed no detectable diffraction has occurred as a result of curvature of space.

If it is still true that photons themselves produce some amount of curvature, then the invariant mass of system m_0 cannot account for this curvature. However, neither can the following:

  • E^2 = \left(pc\right)^2 + \left(m_0c^2\right)^2 is relative to the observer because m_0 is fixed according to SR, not just c, while p is relative to the observer, requiring E^2 to be relative to the observer.
  • E = \gamma m_0c^2 is relative to the observer because \gamma is defined relative to the observer, requiring E to be relative to the observer.

B.T.W. In SR, m_0 is not a time-invariant mass, but a frame-invariant mass. Photons colliding head-on have been shown to produce additional m_0.

So I ask, "What energy term determines gravity in GR?" My basic premise of course is that this quantity should not be dependent on the observer. But, maybe velocity time dilation relative to each mass has something to do with the apparent difference in curvature (more velocity time dilation would mean greater perceived acceleration of bodies in orbit around the mass). Does \sqrt{\left(pc\right)^2 + \left(m_0c^2\right)^2} give us the amount of energy involved in this curvature? :confused:
 
Last edited:
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Please remember that Maxwell's Equations have not been repealed, and it is still perfectly permissible to describe electromagnetic waves in terms of ... electromagnetic fields! Photons are appropriate for very low intensity or very high frequency, but otherwise they are not the best way to go.
"What energy term determines gravity in GR?" My basic premise of course is that this quantity should not be dependent on the observer
But energy IS dependent on the observer. Energy is the 00 component of the stress energy tensor. For electromagnetism,

Tμν = Fμα Fνα - 1/4 gμν Fαβ Fαβ

and this is the source of the gravity.
 
In special relativity to conserve energy for fields it is not sufficient to assign fields energy and momentum, but also "pressure" via a stress-energy-momentum tensor (which may be called the "energy-momentum tensor" or "stress-energy tensor" for convenience).

In general relativity, the energy-momentum tensor is the generalization of Newtonian gravitational mass, and is the source of the gravitational field (the metric field).
 
atyy said:
In special relativity to conserve energy for fields it is not sufficient to assign fields energy and momentum, but also "pressure" via a stress-energy-momentum tensor (which may be called the "energy-momentum tensor" or "stress-energy tensor" for convenience).

In general relativity, the energy-momentum tensor is the generalization of Newtonian gravitational mass, and is the source of the gravitational field (the metric field).

Is this "pressure" the key component in causing gravity (with energy and momentum simply being things which help to define it)? In other words, can the curvature be largely expressed in terms of pressure (as soon it has been calculated), or do energy and momentum make significant contributions separate from pressure?
 
kmarinas86 said:
The relativistic relativistic energy–momentum relationship is:

E^2 = \left(pc\right)^2 + \left(m_0c^2\right)^2

The relativistic energy (for a mass) is:

E = \gamma m_0c^2

It has been said that the curvature of space is contributed to by photons, not just mass. However:

  • The curvature of space produced by a photon field is virtually undetectable as photons are simply not packed dense enough.
  • The ability for a photon to follow a curvs ed path is based primarily on the mass of the celestial objects. Doubling the energy of a photon only does not double this curvature and indeed no detectable diffraction has occurred as a result of curvature of space.

If it is still true that photons themselves produce some amount of curvature, then the invariant mass of system m_0 cannot account for this curvature. However, neither can the following:

  • E^2 = \left(pc\right)^2 + \left(m_0c^2\right)^2 is relative to the observer because m_0 is fixed according to SR, not just c, while p is relative to the observer, requiring E^2 to be relative to the observer.
  • E = \gamma m_0c^2 is relative to the observer because \gamma is defined relative to the observer, requiring E to be relative to the observer.

B.T.W. In SR, m_0 is not a time-invariant mass, but a frame-invariant mass. Photons colliding head-on have been shown to produce additional m_0.

So I ask, "What energy term determines gravity in GR?" My basic premise of course is that this quantity should not be dependent on the observer. But, maybe velocity time dilation relative to each mass has something to do with the apparent difference in curvature (more velocity time dilation would mean greater perceived acceleration of bodies in orbit around the mass). Does \sqrt{\left(pc\right)^2 + \left(m_0c^2\right)^2} give us the amount of energy involved in this curvature? :confused:

Among other mistakes, your «relativistic energy–momentum» is valid in SR not in GR when gravity is present. The energy of a photon with momentum p traveling near Sun is not given by your square root.
 
kmarinas86 said:
Is this "pressure" the key component in causing gravity (with energy and momentum simply being things which help to define it)? In other words, can the curvature be largely expressed in terms of pressure (as soon it has been calculated), or do energy and momentum make significant contributions separate from pressure?
They all make significant contributions. Here is a Wikipedia link about the tensor Bill_K mentioned which is the source of gravity for an EM field:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_stress-energy_tensor

And some further details about the components of stress-energy tensors in general:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress-energy_tensor
 
Since we are on the topic of light waves, I asked a question a year or so ago and never got any answers... ( i figured it was kind of a dumb question) but now a year later, it still bugs me if it still applies... can I get a hand with this?

One way to "build" the SEM tensor is to associate a 3-volume with the energy-momentum 4-vector
<br /> \Delta p^{\alpha\beta}=T^{\alpha\beta}n_\beta \Delta V<br />
This can get one the energy density, momentum density, and pressure by studying the different spacelike/timelike surfaces that comprise the volume. So my question is: is it appropriate to substitute p^\alpha =\hbar k^\alpha for the momentum 4-vector? This would give the SEM tensor in terms of wave quantities. I find this interesting since it phrases SEM in terms of k and ω and the fluxes of these quantities.

Thanks,
 
jfy4 said:
Since we are on the topic of light waves, I asked a question a year or so ago and never got any answers... ( i figured it was kind of a dumb question) but now a year later, it still bugs me if it still applies... can I get a hand with this?

One way to "build" the SEM tensor is to associate a 3-volume with the energy-momentum 4-vector
<br /> \Delta p^{\alpha\beta}=T^{\alpha\beta}n_\beta \Delta V<br />
This can get one the energy density, momentum density, and pressure by studying the different spacelike/timelike surfaces that comprise the volume. So my question is: is it appropriate to substitute p^\alpha =\hbar k^\alpha for the momentum 4-vector? This would give the SEM tensor in terms of wave quantities. I find this interesting since it phrases SEM in terms of k and ω and the fluxes of these quantities.

Thanks,

My guess would be almost, but one would need one more parameter for the amplitude of the wave. Classically, the energy depends on the amplitude (not frequency) of the wave, so I would expect that to show up in the SEM tensor.

You could check it by computing the SEM tensor the usual way (via the Lagrangian), then substituting the plave wave solution.
 

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