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Underwstanding what a gravity wave is?

2006-08-05 00:12:40 · 2 answers · asked by goring 6 in Science & Mathematics Physics

2 answers

Gravitational waves are propagated according to the following concept, c2 = E/m. This is the last part of the physics trilogy. It shows that this force is a product, and the product is part of a frequency trilogy that describes their value.

hf = E, is that of electromagnetic energy.

hf = mk, is that of kinetic energy. Because mass is composed of this kind of energy, it moves according to hf value.

c = hf, is that of the product of c2 = E/m. Because this value expresses energy, in form of physical time, its value may be that of "h" in multiples. The concept of c2 = E/m is that of a field of physical time, or a gravitational field.

There is a two page paper at my 360 blog here at Yahoo, or there is further work at, http://timebones.blogspot.com but it has to be sorted through. I don't have it all in one spot.

2006-08-05 07:16:09 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A hypothetical wave that is held to propagate the force of gravity and to travel at the speed of light.
FOr measurement look at this :
http://www.cosmic.ucar.edu/related_papers/2003_csm1_lange.pdf

Have a nice day

2006-08-05 07:22:24 · answer #2 · answered by fred 055 4 · 0 0

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