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I always thought it was some kind of effect due to the mass of an object causing spacetime to curve, a "steeper" curve leading to a greater gravity effect. If you have more mass concentrated in a smaller space you have a steeper curve than if the same mass was distributed out further. Of course I have no idea why this curvature would actually cause a gravity-like effect.
Originally posted by: everman
I always thought it was some kind of effect due to the mass of an object causing spacetime to curve, a "steeper" curve leading to a greater gravity effect. If you have more mass concentrated in a smaller space you have a steeper curve than if the same mass was distributed out further. Of course I have no idea why this curvature would actually cause a gravity-like effect.
It's because objects follow straight paths in spacetime. If you curve the space, the path is curved. A curved path means acceleration, and due to the equivalence principle (acceleration = gravity) this means you feel a gravitational effect.
The concept actually was developed in the opposite direction though. Einstein postulated the equivalence principle, then decided that gravity meant a curved path through spacetime, and thus massive objects curve spacetime.
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