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Time Travel Discussion
Does Gravity Really Bend Light?
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<blockquote data-quote="Carl Miller" data-source="post: 80399" data-attributes="member: 4986"><p>The ABC on relativity by Einstein=</p><p></p><p>According to relativity; gravity is not a force; it's a warping of space-time (which is an amalgam of time and space) that happens in the presence of mass. The warping is analogous to the bending of a rubber sheet when a weight is placed on it. </p><p></p><p>1- When starlight passes near a massive body, such as the sun, the shortest route is a curve line that follows the curvature of space-time. Thus, the starlight appears to be coming from a different point than its actual origin. The observation of this effect in 1919 convinced physicists that Einsten's strange theory was right. </p><p></p><p>2- If a mass is concentrated enough, the curvature of space-time becomes infinite. This phenomenon is known as a black hole because a light beam that comes too close will never escape.</p><p></p><p>' Appropriated ' from google.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Carl Miller, post: 80399, member: 4986"] The ABC on relativity by Einstein= According to relativity; gravity is not a force; it's a warping of space-time (which is an amalgam of time and space) that happens in the presence of mass. The warping is analogous to the bending of a rubber sheet when a weight is placed on it. 1- When starlight passes near a massive body, such as the sun, the shortest route is a curve line that follows the curvature of space-time. Thus, the starlight appears to be coming from a different point than its actual origin. The observation of this effect in 1919 convinced physicists that Einsten's strange theory was right. 2- If a mass is concentrated enough, the curvature of space-time becomes infinite. This phenomenon is known as a black hole because a light beam that comes too close will never escape. ' Appropriated ' from google. [/QUOTE]
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Does Gravity Really Bend Light?
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