Why is Space-time Warped by Gravity?
Most recent answer: 01/15/2016
- Dr. Rob Backstein (age 44)
Toronto, Canada
That's a very perceptive question. We've addressed it some here, https://van.physics.illinois.edu/qa/listing.php?id=175, especially in follow-up #7. The key point is that it's not the up-down-ness of those curved sheets that determines the geodesic paths, the things that play the role of straight lines. It's just the curvature. The curvature induced by any mass has nothing to do with the way somebody chooses to embed a picture of that curved space in a higher-dimensional flat space. Turn the picture sideways or upside down and the rules for the paths that things follow don't change at all. (See also http://van.physics.illinois.edu/QA/listing.php?id=21373.)
So no Newtonian force is needed to give this gravitational behavior. Still, we haven't explained why it is that energy should curve spacetime, so there's an element of the theory that's put in, not derived.
Mike W.
(published on 01/15/2016)