You only need 4 linearly independent vectors; orthogonality is not
needed. Once you have this linear space you can construct an orthogonal
basis, but you can't directly probe spacelike vectors.
Saibal
On 24-08-2024 04:32, Alan Grayson wrote:
> If calculating the metric tensor is ill-defined, it seem impossible to
> use Einstein's Field Equations to get any useful prediction, but yet
> that's the claim. Baffling, to say the least. AG
>
> On Thursday, August 22, 2024 at 2:32:51 AM UTC-6 Alan Grayson wrote:
>
>> A related question is this; if the manifold is spacetime, and at
>> some point P we consider all test particles moving at velocities
>> LESS THAN C, containing point P, is the set of these tangent vectors
>> sufficient to define the tangent plane at P? IOW, can we OMIT all
>> test particles moving at velocities GREATER THAN C moving through
>> point P, and still have a well defined tangent plane at point P? If
>> so, the problem I am struggling with is whether omitting such test
>> particles on the GR manifold, as we must, will the result be a
>> tangent plane whose tangent vectors at P do NOT form a vector space,
>> since it isn't closed, and therefore have a problem with defining
>> the metric tensor at P which is defined on a vector space. TIA, AG
>>
>> On Tuesday, August 20, 2024 at 2:26:16 AM UTC-6 Alan Grayson
>> wrote:
>>
>>> One way to do it, say at point P on the spacetime manifold, is to
>>> imagine test particles of all velocities LESS THAN C, passing
>>> through point P. Then, presumably, these vectors define the
>>> tangent space at P. But for these vectors to form a vector space,
>>> ON WHICH THE METRIC TENSOR IS DEFINED, we have to include vectors
>>> with velocities GREATER THAN C. So, the original set of velocity
>>> vectors are NOT closed under usual addition. We must expand the
>>> original set of velocity vectors moving at velocities less than c,
>>> to presumably close that set in order to construct the vector
>>> space, without which the metric tensor is undefined.
>>>
>>> What bothers me about this procedure is that applying it to the
>>> closed interval, say [0.1], and asking whether it forms a vector
>>> space under addition (with the real numbers forming the scalar
>>> field), it's claimed this interval is NOT a vector space since it
>>> isn't CLOSED under addition. Well, if we can add elements to the
>>> tangent vectors with velocities less than c, with those having
>>> velocities greater than c, doesn't the original set of vectors
>>> ALSO fail the closure test, and therefore fails to make the total
>>> set a VECTOR SPACE, necessary for defining the metric tensor?
>>>
>>> TY, AG
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