Freeman Posted July 2, 2005 Posted July 2, 2005 I have a quick question about the curvature of space-time equation, well two questions. 1. What is "k" on the right hand side of the equation (the equation I am referring to is the curvature tensor equals eight pi multiplied by "k" multiplied by the stress energy tensor). 2. What is the stress energy tensor? I know the second question is really an uber-simpleton one, but it's been on my mind for a while now...
□h=-16πT Posted July 10, 2005 Posted July 10, 2005 k is [math]\frac{G}{c^4}[/math], I think that's what you're refering to. The tensor you call the curvature tensor isn't actually THE curvature tensor, it's a tensor constructed from contractions of the Riemann curvature tensor that automatically conserves energy-momentum, but it does essentially give the curvature. For a fluid the SE tensor describes the dyamics of the system, i.e. energy-density, energy-flux, momentum-density, momentum-flux etc. One definition that you may find for a general SE tensor is [math] T^{\mu\nu}=\frac{1}{\sqrt{-g}}\frac{dS}{dg^{\mu\nu} } [/math] Where [math]g^{\alpha\beta}[/math] is the metric, g is its determinant and S is the action for the system.
□h=-16πT Posted July 11, 2005 Posted July 11, 2005 Does that answer your question, or would you like a better explanation?
Freeman Posted July 13, 2005 Author Posted July 13, 2005 That answers my question. Thanks for the help!
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