So, if all the bodies are embedded in space-time and moves through it, is there some kind of 'friction' with space time of the planets? For example, the Earth suffers friction when moving near the sun due the curvature and General Relativity and loses energy?

If a planet loses energy due to friction can this energy loss be measured?

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I don't see any reason to downvote this. It's a perfectly reasonable question. – StephenG 2 days ago
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@StephenG "Attracted four terrible answers within ten hours" is a pretty good sign of a bad question. – Emilio Pisanty yesterday
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I'm probably biased at this point, but I would suggest it could also be a sign of a question that's deeper than it looks. It's certainly left me thinking about a couple of issues I've not in the past. YMMV. – StephenG yesterday
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@EmilioPisanty: Or maybe it's a pretty good sign of a really good question that many more people than the OP could benefit from. Including the mistaken answerers! – Lightness Races in Orbit 6 hours ago
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I think the question suggests you are thinking of space-time as if it were e.g. a substance, like a fluid, that we move through. That's not how we view space-time, at least in pure general relativity.

But the question you ask is a deceptively simple one and it raises some complex questions. And I don't think we actually can answer them exactly because I'm not sure we have a definitive answer to the most basic question hidden in your answer: What is space-time?

is there some kind of 'friction' with space time of the planets?

There is a "kind" of friction, but perhaps "interaction" would be a better choice of word, as I'd prefer to avoid the notion of classical friction forces.

We say that when an object moves through space time it distorts space time - stretches it, compresses it. Mass creates distortions we describe as gravity.

It's a little deeper than that.

We also know, thanks to the wonderful LIGO experiments, that these gravitational effects do distort space in a wave-like way. And an object can lose energy (has to, in fact) when it creates such waves.

Which leads us to this:

if a planet loses energy due to friction can this energy loss be measured?

No (I suppose I should say, not at our technological level). It's tiny.

The gravitational waves we have measured (which represent the closest thing to your friction loss) are due to the collisions of huge black holes, and the disturbance they make is so small that LIGO scientists are pushing the boundaries of measurement to detect them at all. A planet is a tiny thing compared to those black holes and it barely makes a dent, as it were, in space time by comparison.

But it's worth saying that our current understanding of space-time is a little basic. We don't have a clear idea of how the quantum world fits into the grand scale of relativistic space-time. At present we have two models, one of a small scale space-time filled with a sea of virtual particles and the other of a pure, clean empty space time with the odd idealized gravitational mass in it. We don't have a single theory connecting them, so we don't really have a proper theory of space-time (or perhaps something deeper than that is needed - no one knows).

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A superb answer. You make me wonder about timescales. LIGO, and before that the Hulse-Taylor binary pulsar, proved that there are systems whose lifetime against gravitational decay is $10^{9\text{--}10}$ years. It would be interesting to compute the comparable lifetime for the Sun-Jupiter system, or Earth-Moon, and see whether their lifetime against collapse due to gravitational-wave emission is more like $10^{100}$ years, or more like $10^{1000}$ years. – rob 2 days ago
    
Maybe hidden variables make up the sea of spacetime, surrounding particles (of course not surrounding ín space). If so, quantum mechanics is a consequence of this structure and gravity can't be quantized in that case. – descheleschilder 2 days ago
    
I think gravitational waves can be seen as the gravitational equivalent to electromagnetic "bremsstrahlung". The name ("breaking radiation") implies an effect resembling friction; after all, the mass is slowed down. But while friction heats a medium, bremsstrahlung or gravitational waves do not; all kinetic energy lost by the moving masses is radiated away. – Peter A. Schneider yesterday
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Another difference is that linear movement is not slowed down at all, as opposed to movement underlying normal friction. Space time does (to our knowledge) not offer resistance to moving through it as such -- it's acceleration which is lossy because it creates waves. – Peter A. Schneider yesterday
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@jpmc26 AH, yes. It's not breaking anything I guess ;-). – Peter A. Schneider 8 hours ago

We cannot gain an understanding of the nature of Einsteinian spacetime at a planetary scale. All matter, including planets, are composed of particles, and to answer this question we should consider the link between spacetime and particles, such as quarks.

Clearly, a particle has mass, and thus inertia. But what is inertia? It is presumably what the questioner means when he talks of 'friction'. A particle has inertia, or friction if you like, because it is bound to the spacetime field postulated by James Clark Maxwell in the 19th century, in Maxwell's equations.

Modern theory looks upon inertia as being due to a coupling or bond, which attaches a quark to the spacetime field. So yes, all particles have inertia, and the inertia is the reason why a particle has mass: mass being merely a measurement of the amount of energy which is required to break the coupling bond.

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