I got into a fairly heated argument with a Ph'D in physics from Brent's alma mata, the University of Texas at Austin, concerning the construction of the tangent vector space in GR. For this and other reasons we are no longer in communication. He insisted on considerating particle paths of all velocities going through some point P on the spacetime manifold on which the objective is to construct the tangent vector space at P. I objected since this would violate one of the basic postulates of GR, which preclude particles assumed to be exceeding light speed. I was berated for making such a criticism. Initially I thought these faster than light speed particles were needed to form a vector space, in order to satisfy the linear additive property of a vector space under the field of real numbers. But suppose these vectors are constrained to be added relativistically, so no pair when added, can exceed light speed. Will this be sufficient to satisfy the linear additive property of vectors in a vector space, without violating the postulate of GR precluding faster than light speed particles? TY, AG
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I think you need to distinguish the vector-space of velocities and the vector space of positions.
Brent
On Sunday, February 16, 2025 at 8:20:08 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
I think you need to distinguish the vector-space of velocities and the vector space of positions.
Brent
I'm pretty sure it's the vector space of velocities which defines the vector space on the tangent space at each point on the manifold. If we define addition as relativistic, it should restrict all those vectors when added, to velocities less than light speed. Do you agree? AG