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As far as I can tell, gravitons are unbounded to branes, so suppose two p-branes came within a very small distance of eachother. Would the gravity of a massive body in the first p-brane be capable of affecting a massive body within the other p-brane?

2006-08-18 21:47:08 · 2 answers · asked by frostwizrd 2 in Science & Mathematics Physics

According to m-theory....

2006-08-18 22:16:26 · update #1

2 answers

These sites may help you:

http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/lrr-2004-7/articlesu2.html

http://www.theoryofspacetime.co.uk/consequences.htm

http://forum.physorg.com/Black-Holes&%2333%3B_1965.html

The latter (below) are pdf 's, they may take a few seconds to load dependding on your connection speed:

http://www.physics.princeton.edu/~steinh/BTBB36.pdf#search=%22What%20is%20the%20effect%20of%20gravitation%20across%20p-branes%20according%20to%20M-theory%3F%22

http://www.mukto-mona.com/Articles/biplab_pal/Review1_alo_hate.pdf#search=%22What%20is%20the%20effect%20of%20gravitation%20across%20p-branes%3F%22

2006-08-18 23:46:57 · answer #1 · answered by Adyghe Ha'Yapheh-Phiyah 6 · 0 0

p-brane - In theoretical physics, a membrane, brane, or p-brane is a spatially prolonged, mathematical theory that seems in string theory and its kin (M-theory and brane cosmology). The variable p refers back to the spatial length of the brane.

2016-12-11 11:24:04 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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