When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: gravitation 9th pdf english version latino 7

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gravitation (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitation_(book)

    Gravitation is a widely adopted textbook on Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity, written by Charles W. Misner, Kip S. Thorne, and John Archibald Wheeler. It was originally published by W. H. Freeman and Company in 1973 and reprinted by Princeton University Press in 2017.

  3. List of Gravitation chapters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Gravitation_chapters

    The cover of the first volume of Gravitation as published by Gentosha in March 1996 in Japan. The chapters of Gravitation are written and illustrated by Maki Murakami. Tokyopop licensed the series for an English-language release in North America and published the twelve volumes from August 5, 2003, to July 12, 2005.

  4. Bimetric gravity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bimetric_gravity

    On the contrary, the second class of bimetric gravity theories does not rely on massive gravitons and does not modify Newton's law, but instead describes the universe as a manifold having two coupled Riemannian metrics, where matter populating the two sectors interact through gravitation (and antigravitation if the topology and the Newtonian ...

  5. List of equations in gravitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_equations_in...

    A common misconception occurs between centre of mass and centre of gravity.They are defined in similar ways but are not exactly the same quantity. Centre of mass is the mathematical description of placing all the mass in the region considered to one position, centre of gravity is a real physical quantity, the point of a body where the gravitational force acts.

  6. Nonsymmetric gravitational theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonsymmetric_gravitational...

    In theoretical physics, the nonsymmetric gravitational theory [1] (NGT) of John Moffat is a classical theory of gravitation that tries to explain the observation of the flat rotation curves of galaxies. In general relativity, the gravitational field is characterized by a symmetric rank-2 tensor, the metric tensor.

  7. Brans–Dicke theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brans–Dicke_theory

    In physics, the Brans–Dicke theory of gravitation (sometimes called the Jordan–Brans–Dicke theory) is a competitor to Einstein's general theory of relativity.It is an example of a scalar–tensor theory, a gravitational theory in which the gravitational interaction is mediated by a scalar field as well as the tensor field of general relativity.

  8. Einstein–Cartan theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einstein–Cartan_theory

    Dennis Sciama [8] and Tom Kibble [9] independently revisited the theory in the 1960s, and an important review was published in 1976. [ 10 ] Einstein–Cartan theory has been historically overshadowed by its torsion-free counterpart and other alternatives like Brans–Dicke theory because torsion seemed to add little predictive benefit at the ...

  9. Timeline of gravitational physics and relativity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_gravitational...

    1921 – Theodor Kaluza demonstrates that a five-dimensional version of Einstein's equations unifies gravitation and electromagnetism. [81] This idea is later extended by Oskar Klein. [82] 1922 – Alexander Friedmann derives the Friedmann equations. [83] [43] 1922 – Enrico Fermi introduces the Fermi coordinates.