10-03-2020, 10:01 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-03-2020, 10:02 PM by stevebowers.)
Yes it does, and gravity waves are even more negligible than light waves as a source of mass-energy and gravity.
You can't explain dark matter using either lightwaves or gravity waves, because they both constitute a small fraction of the mass-energy of the universe, and they are not local, because they continually propagate away from their source. Dark matter needs to stay where it is so that it can form halos.
You can't explain dark matter using either lightwaves or gravity waves, because they both constitute a small fraction of the mass-energy of the universe, and they are not local, because they continually propagate away from their source. Dark matter needs to stay where it is so that it can form halos.