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Gravity is an attractive force that affects and is affected by all mass and - in general relativity - energy, pressure, and stress. Prefer newtonian-gravity or general-relativity if sensible.

1 vote
0 answers
68 views

Can a micro black hole hover above a regular black hole?

So let's say you have a black hole $A$, that is small enough for its gravity to be very small, but has strong hawking radiation, and larger black hole, $B$, with very small hawking radiation, but stronger … gravity. …
Christopher King's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
108 views

The relativity of gravity: If mass is relative how much gravity do I experience?

From one reference frame, there is a lot of gravity, from the other, a little. …
Christopher King's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
176 views

If it takes infinitely long for someone to fall in a black hole, wouldn't it evaporate first? [duplicate]

Let's say I decide to jump into a large black hole. A distant observer never sees me enter the black hole, but he does see the black hole evaporate. According to this reasoning, I would then keep goin …
Christopher King's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
296 views

Why does General Relativity predict more light deflection than Netwonian Physics?

If one looks at the limit as light's mass approaches zero, Newtonian Physics predicts a deflection of light (this can be seen by the fact that all objects are accelerate the same due to gravity.) …
Christopher King's user avatar
11 votes
2 answers
2k views

Why doesn't gravity mess up the double slit experiment?

My question is, won't the gravity of the electron affect the earth, thereby causing it decoherence and its wave function to collapse (or for MWI, entanglement and loss of information to the environment …
Christopher King's user avatar