ruimtetijdkromming
Ruimtetijdkromming refers to the curvature of spacetime, a fundamental concept in Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity. Instead of gravity being a force acting between objects, general relativity proposes that massive objects warp or curve the fabric of spacetime around them. This curvature dictates how objects move, including light. Imagine a heavy ball placed on a stretched rubber sheet; the ball creates a dip, and smaller marbles rolled nearby will curve towards the ball due to this dip. Similarly, planets orbit stars not because of a direct pull, but because they are following the curved paths in spacetime created by the star's mass. This curvature is not limited to three spatial dimensions but also affects the fourth dimension, time. Time itself passes slower in regions of stronger gravitational fields, a phenomenon known as gravitational time dilation. The concept of ruimtetijdkromming is essential for understanding phenomena such as the orbits of planets, the bending of light around massive objects (gravitational lensing), the existence of black holes, and the expansion of the universe. It provides a geometric interpretation of gravity, fundamentally changing our understanding of the universe.