Definition of Bimetric. Meaning of Bimetric. Synonyms of Bimetric

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Bimetric. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Bimetric and, of course, Bimetric synonyms and on the right images related to the word Bimetric.

Definition of Bimetric

No result for Bimetric. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Bimetric from wikipedia

- Bimetric gravity or bigravity refers to two different classes of theories. The first class of theories relies on modified mathematical theories of gravity...
- not require any dark energy. M****ive gravity and its extensions, such as bimetric gravity, can yield cosmological solutions which do in fact display late-time...
- Chameleon Pressuron Vector–tensor theories ****ings–Nordtvedt Will–Nordtvedt Bimetric theories Lightman–Lee Rastall Rosen (1975) Other metric theories (see section...
- Engineering 2023: Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Bimetric gravity "Alumni Award Recipients". www.epflalumni.ch. Retrieved 17 January...
- 1940 and 1989 Rosen published a series of articles on his versions of bimetric gravity, an attempt to improve on General Relativity by removing singularities...
- everything classical Poincaré gauge theory Einstein–Cartan Teleparallelism Bimetric theories Gauge theory gravity Composite gravity f(R) gravity Infinite derivative...
- an inverse-square law, as does QCD. Sivaram published a review of this bimetric theory approach. Although this approach has not so far led to a recognizably...
- everything classical Poincaré gauge theory Einstein–Cartan Teleparallelism Bimetric theories Gauge theory gravity Composite gravity f(R) gravity Infinite derivative...
- everything classical Poincaré gauge theory Einstein–Cartan Teleparallelism Bimetric theories Gauge theory gravity Composite gravity f(R) gravity Infinite derivative...
- gravitation as a field in a flat manifold. Those theories are variously called "bimetric gravity", the "field-theoretical approach to general relativity", and so...