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Search options not deleted url *.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitoelectromagnetism*
30 votes
1 answer
2k views

What different approximations yield Gravitoelectromagnetism and Weak Field Einstein Equations?

This question is inspired by this answer, which cites Gravitoelectromagnetism (GEM) as a valid approximation to the Einstein Field Equations (EFE). The wonted presentation of gravitational waves is …
Selene Routley's user avatar
27 votes
Accepted

Why is there no gravitational magnetic field? (Or, is there?)

There is a sort of analog called gravitomagnetism (or gravitoelectromagnetism), but it is not discussed that often because it applies only in a special case. It is an approximation of general relativi …
Kyle Oman's user avatar
  • 18.6k
12 votes

Similarity between the Coulomb force and Newton's gravitational force

It's a good observation that the electric and gravitational fields both satisfy Poisson's equation $$ \nabla^2\Phi_G = 4\pi\rho_G, \qquad \nabla^2\Phi_E = -\frac{\rho_E}{\epsilon_0} $$ where $\Phi_ …
joshphysics's user avatar
  • 58.3k
9 votes

Is gravity just electromagnetic attraction?

I'd like to add mainly to Frederic Brünner's and Anna V's answers. Let's begin with, as Frederic does: Sunlight does not point back to the sun’s true center of gravity, whereas gravity always poi …
Selene Routley's user avatar
9 votes

Is there a momentum for charge?

Not much sense. Your "center of charge" is nothing but the dipole moment divided by the net total charge. "Normalised dipole moment, if you will". If you take $q|\vec v|$ instead of $q\vec v$, you ge …
Manishearth's user avatar
  • 19.1k
9 votes

Are we closer to a theory of everything thanks to the detection of gravitational waves?

It seems to me that means gravitational waves move at the speed of light. And it seems this implies that a similar theory could be drawn up for gravity as Maxwell did for the electric and magnet …
knzhou's user avatar
  • 105k
9 votes
Accepted

Issues with Newton's third law and Euler's laws of motion

You're right that in general, the right way to think about electromagnetic interactions isn't between charges at all: instead charges each individually act on the field, which intervenes between them. …
knzhou's user avatar
  • 105k
9 votes

Negative Mass and gravitation

Moving mass does generate gravitation different from stationary mass. This is the ''gravitomagnetic'' effect predicted by Lens and Thirring in the 20's and measured by Gravity Probe B: http://en.wik …
Zo the Relativist's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
858 views

Materials with different gravitomagnetic permeability?

If you start with general relativity, and assume small perturbations around a nearly flat metric, it is possible to obtain linearized equations of gravity that look a lot like Maxwell's equations, als …
jdm's user avatar
  • 4,267
9 votes

Definition of the stress-energy tensor

Why don't we denote presence of matter and energy in space-time (as we do for presence of electric charge) by a 4-vector field? Because energy is not Lorentz-invariant, whereas electric charge is …
Selene Routley's user avatar
8 votes
1 answer
406 views

Baez & Bunn: The Meaning of Einstein's (field) Equation

In this online tutorial, aimed at pea-brains like me, the authors restate Einstein's equation $$ \mathbf{G}_{\mu\nu} = \frac{8 \pi G}{c^4} \mathbf{T}_{\mu\nu} $$ in words: Given a small ball of …
robert bristow-johnson's user avatar
7 votes

Resolving General relativity and Newtonian mechanics on a computer

You have taught yourself through your own experimenting and curiousity a famous lesson. You are indeed doing exactly as Laplace did and your findings are the same as Laplace's. To add to David Hammen …
7 votes
1 answer
751 views

Can gravity radiate?

In electromagnetism, when a charge accelerates, it emits radiation. We know this because we can write the retarded potentials, apply $\vec E=- \nabla V-\frac{\partial \vec{A}}{\partial t}$ and $\vec B …
Lagrangiano's user avatar
  • 1,880
7 votes
Accepted

Factor of 4 (or 2) in the gravitoelectromagnetic (GEM) Lorentz-force law. Which is correct? ...

TL;DR: The factor of $\color{red}{4}$ in the Lorentz force comes morally speaking from trying to mimic a spin-2 field as a spin-1 field. There is no unique/canonical/"correct" normalization convention …
Qmechanic's user avatar
  • 213k
6 votes
Accepted

If you could ride an elevator through the earth

Let's put a more precise description to the other answers, particularly Neil's. First, note that there is a Gauss Law for static gravitational fields, owing to the inverse square nature of the static …
Selene Routley's user avatar

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