Relativistic theory of gravitation

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Abstract

In the present paper a relativistic theory of gravity (RTG) is unambiguously constructed on the basis of the special relativity and geometrization principle. In this, a gravitational field is treated as the Faraday-Maxwell spin-2 and spin-0 physical field possessing energy and momentum. The source of a gravitational field is the total conserved energy-momentum tensor of matter and of a gravitational field in Minkowski space. In the RTG, the conservation laws are strictly fulfilled for the energy-momentum and for the angular momentum of matter and a gravitational field. The theory explains the whole available set of experiments on gravity. In virtue of the geometrization principle, the Riemannian space in our theory is of field origin, since it appears as an effective force space due to the action of a gravitational field on matter. The RTG leads to an exceptionally strong prediction: The Universe is not closed but just “flat”. This suggests that in the Universe a “missing mass” should exist in a form of matter.

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APA

Logunov, A. A., & Mestvirishvili, M. A. (2005). Relativistic theory of gravitation. In 100 Years Of Gravity And Accelerated Frames: The Deepest Insights Of Einstein And Yang-mills (pp. 442–461). World Scientific Publishing Co. https://doi.org/10.1143/ptp.74.31

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