Your first question has been answered, I'll have a stab at the second.
Bjarne said:
Additional question
According to GR gravity is caused to curvature of space, not to a force..
Or an object is not following an orbit because of a force or because of energy, but because of a property of space.
According to Newtonian gravity , Gravity is a force. = F
How is this possible? Are we ridding both a bull and a horse at the same time?
- Is gravity a force, - or is gravity not a force?
- And if gravity is a force, how can a force pop up from space ? - I mean without energy ?
The Newtonian and Einsteinian viewpoints are different, but each is internally consistent. Take a very simple situation; a cup of coffee sitting on your desk. There are two ways of looking at this.
Newtonian:
The force due to gravity between the cup and the centre of the Earth applies a force downwards on the cup. In the abscence of any other forces, the cup would accelerate downwards. However, the cup is on the table, so what happens is that the gravitational force pushes down on the table, which pushes back with an exactly cancelling 'normal' force. Therefore there are two equal and opposite forces on the cup and hence the net force is zero and the cup is unaccelerated and stays in place.
Einsteinian:
The mass of the Earth causes a curvature in the space-time around it. This curvature changes the natural 'straight line' path of objects (formally known as the geodesic) from what it would be in the abscence of curvature. This is the parth that objects with no net force (remember now that gravity is not a force in this perspective) will follow. Specifically, objects following a geodesic near the Earth will move towards the centre of the Earth (neglecting any tangential motion, let's assume our coffee cup is not in orbit). Therefore if you apply no forces to your coffee cup, it will naturally move towards the centre of the Earth, it will fall. By placing it on a table, you are now applying a force upwards. This forces continually accelerates the cup, continually preventing it from following its natural path.
For things like coffee cups on the Earths surface, we can use either 'philosophy' and we get the same answer. Newtonian physics is easier to grasp, but it's worth trying to understand the difference between the two approaches. Once the gravitational fields get strong enough, or the coffee cup is moving fast enough, we have to use Einsteins version, because that is the only one that gets the right answer.
The reason the Einsieinian approach may be tricky to grasp at first is that it flies in the face of the way we normally think of our everyday existence. Standing still on the ground feels like the normal, neutral state, so it's unsurprising that Newtonian physics describes this as being unaccelerated. On the other hand, freely falling is an unusual thing for us, so it feels like that is the situation in which we are being accelerated. One thing to realize though is when you are standing on the ground, you can clearly feel the acceleration upwards due to the ground, do it for long enough and you'll get sore feet! On the other hand, when you are falling you are 'weightless', in the abscence of air resistance, if you closed your eyes you wouldn't even know which way was 'down', because there are no forces being applied to you to give you a reference direction.