- #1
MeJennifer
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From Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_solution_%28general_relativity%29" we can read:
" Since Tab = 0 in a vacuum region, it might seem that according to general relativity, vacuum regions must contain no energy. But the gravitational field can do work, so we must expect the gravitational field itself to possesses energy, and it does. However, determining the precise location of this gravitational field energy is technically problematical in general relativity, by its very nature of the clean separation into a universal gravitational interaction and "all the rest". "
Does this make any sense, or should we consider this some wild and confused interpretation?
" Since Tab = 0 in a vacuum region, it might seem that according to general relativity, vacuum regions must contain no energy. But the gravitational field can do work, so we must expect the gravitational field itself to possesses energy, and it does. However, determining the precise location of this gravitational field energy is technically problematical in general relativity, by its very nature of the clean separation into a universal gravitational interaction and "all the rest". "
Does this make any sense, or should we consider this some wild and confused interpretation?
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