Understanding the Principle of Equivalence: A Closer Look

In summary: I'm not sure what you're asking.In summary, the principle of equivalence states that an object with the same mass in an inertial and gravitational field is equivalent. General relativity does not seem to explain this principle.
  • #1
SinghRP
73
0
What’s your understanding of the principle of equivalence?
In the literature, I find two meanings:
(1) Gravitational mass is numerically equal to inertial “mass.” (This is a postulate.)
(2) A mass at rest in a frame is equivalent to being in a “gravitational field” in an accelerated frame. (This one is a pseudogravity.)
General relativity does not seem to explain either!
 
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  • #2
SinghRP said:
What’s your understanding of the principle of equivalence?
In the literature, I find two meanings:
(1) Gravitational mass is numerically equal to inertial “mass.” (This is a postulate.)
(2) A mass at rest in a frame is equivalent to being in a “gravitational field” in an accelerated frame. (This one is a pseudogravity.)
General relativity does not seem to explain either!

There is experimental evidence for (1) See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eötvös_experiment
 
  • #3
SinghRP said:
(1) Gravitational mass is numerically equal to inertial “mass.” (This is a postulate.)

It's a postulate as far as the theory is concerned, but it's also an observed fact, at least to as high an accuracy as we have tested. See the link Mentz114 gave.

The key thing about this version of the principle is that it enables us to view gravity as due to spacetime curvature; if the ratio of gravitational mass to inertial mass were different for different objects, we could not do that.

SinghRP said:
(2) A mass at rest in a frame is equivalent to being in a “gravitational field” in an accelerated frame. (This one is a pseudogravity.)

This is not quite correct as a statement of this version of the principle. The correct statement is: Being at rest in an accelerated frame (for example, inside a rocket whose engines are firing), and feeling a certain force (say 1 g), is equivalent to being at rest in a gravitational field and feeling the same force (for example, being at rest on the surface of the Earth and feeling a 1 g force).

SinghRP said:
General relativity does not seem to explain either!

What makes you think that?
 
  • #4
SinghRP said:
What’s your understanding of the principle of equivalence?
In the literature, I find two meanings:
(1) Gravitational mass is numerically equal to inertial “mass.” (This is a postulate.)
(2) A mass at rest in a frame is equivalent to being in a “gravitational field” in an accelerated frame. (This one is a pseudogravity.)
General relativity does not seem to explain either!

The way I would put it is a variation of number (2):

(2') An object in freefall in a gravitational field is locally equivalent to an object traveling inertially in gravity-free space.

In other words, the local effects of gravity can be made to vanish by choosing freefall coordinates.

For example, in gravity-free space, a tiny charged particle will obey an equation of motion given by:

[itex]m \dfrac{dU^\mu}{d\tau} = q F^\mu_\nu U^\nu[/itex]

where [itex]U^\mu[/itex] is 4-velocity, [itex]\tau[/itex] is proper time, [itex]q[/itex] is the charge, and [itex]F^\mu_\nu[/itex] is the electromagnetic field strength tensor (which incorporates both the electric and magnetic fields).

The exact same equation will hold locally in the presence of a gravitational field, provided that you choose "freefall" coordinates.
 
  • #5
I believe there are a couple of equivalence principles known as weak (WEP) and strong (EEP). The weak is the one about the equivalence of masses, the strong is really a statement about co-ordinate independence, gauge, diffeomorphisms etc.
 
  • #6
stevendaryl said:
(2') An object in freefall in a gravitational field is locally equivalent to an object traveling inertially in gravity-free space.

I realize this is largely a matter of definition, but to me this is part of (1), not (2). The reason we can make the local effects of gravity vanish is that inertial and gravitational mass are equal; if they weren't we couldn't do that. This is another way of saying that we can view gravity as a manifestation of spacetime curvature because inertial and gravitational mass are equal.

(2) is talking about something different: what happens when objects are *not* in free fall. The key point about (2) is that equal proper acceleration is what defines "equivalent" states of motion. The free fall case, zero proper acceleration, can be viewed as a special case of this; but that special case alone is not enough. We need the full principle of equivalence, covering *all* possible values of proper acceleration (not just zero), to justify the full machinery of GR for dealing with all kinds of motion in curved spacetime, not just inertial motion.
 
  • #7
To PeterDonis: Answer to "What makes you think that?
I get lost in mathematical jungle. I am a physicist, and I like to think in terms of physical models. I recall Feynman also: The glory of mathematics is that you don't have to say what you are talking about.

The genesis of POE is in:
(Gravitational mass) (Gravitational field intensity) = (Inertial mass) (Acceleration).
(I agree with your "corrected" stateent.) But my statement is just an interpretation the above.
Another expression:
(Electical charge) (Electrical field intensity) = (Inertial mass) (Acceleration).
I may interpret it as: an electrical charge at rest in a frame is equivalent to being in an "electrical field" in an acclerating frame.
 
  • #8
SinghRP said:
Another expression:
(Electical charge) (Electrical field intensity) = (Inertial mass) (Acceleration).
I may interpret it as: an electrical charge at rest in a frame is equivalent to being in an "electrical field" in an acclerating frame.
You cannot say that, because the resistance to motion of the charge is supplied by the matter, and the mass does not cancel from the acceleration equation as it does with gravity.

[edit]See post#10 below.
 
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  • #9
[Edit] You're completely right, what I wrote was not as general as I had intended.

What I meant to say was that physics in a gravitational field when described by freefall coordinates is equivalent to physics in a gravity-free space when described by inertial Cartesian coordinates. That's not what I said.
 
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  • #10
SinghRP said:
To PeterDonis: Answer to "What makes you think that?
I get lost in mathematical jungle. I am a physicist, and I like to think in terms of physical models. I recall Feynman also: The glory of mathematics is that you don't have to say what you are talking about.

The genesis of POE is in:
(Gravitational mass) (Gravitational field intensity) = (Inertial mass) (Acceleration).
(I agree with your "corrected" stateent.) But my statement is just an interpretation the above.
Another expression:
(Electical charge) (Electrical field intensity) = (Inertial mass) (Acceleration).
I may interpret it as: an electrical charge at rest in a frame is equivalent to being in an "electrical field" in an acclerating frame.

Not quite. Mathematically,

[itex]M_{inertial}\ \vec{A} = M_{grav}\ \vec{g}_{grav}[/itex]

where [itex]\vec{g}_{grav}[/itex] is the gravitational field.

Since [itex]M_{grav} = M_{inertial}[/itex], you can divide through by [itex]M_{grav}[/itex] to get:

[itex]\vec{A} = \vec{g}_{grav}[/itex]

Which means that acceleration due to gravity is universal, the same for all objects, regardless of their mass, or what they are made out of, or whatever. That's the principle character of "fictitious" or "inertial" forces such as the "g" forces that arise in an accelerating rocket. This means that gravity can be understand as locally equivalent to a fictitious or inertial force.

In contrast, if you start with the force due to electric fields, you have:

[itex]M_{inertial}\ \vec{A} = Q \vec{E}[/itex]

where [itex]Q[/itex] is the electric charge, and [itex]\vec{E}[/itex] is the electric field.

If you do the same trick of dividing through by [itex]M_{inertial}[/itex], you find:
[itex]\vec{A} = \dfrac{Q}{M_{inertial}} \vec{E}[/itex]

So the acceleration due to electrical forces is not universal; the acceleration depends on the charge-to-mass ratio. So electrical forces can't be interpreted as inertial, or fictitious forces, since they accelerate different objects in different ways.
 
  • #11
PeterDonis said:
I realize this is largely a matter of definition, but to me this is part of (1), not (2). The reason we can make the local effects of gravity vanish is that inertial and gravitational mass are equal; if they weren't we couldn't do that. This is another way of saying that we can view gravity as a manifestation of spacetime curvature because inertial and gravitational mass are equal.

(2) is talking about something different: what happens when objects are *not* in free fall. The key point about (2) is that equal proper acceleration is what defines "equivalent" states of motion. The free fall case, zero proper acceleration, can be viewed as a special case of this; but that special case alone is not enough. We need the full principle of equivalence, covering *all* possible values of proper acceleration (not just zero), to justify the full machinery of GR for dealing with all kinds of motion in curved spacetime, not just inertial motion.

Doh! I misread my own post. You're exactly right, and I was wrong. What I meant to say was that physics in a gravitational field described using freefall coordinates is locally equivalent to physics in gravity-free space described by inertial coordinates.
 
  • #12
[Edit: Looks like our posts crossed in the mail, so to speak. The following may be superfluous, but I'll leave it in case there is any further comment.]

stevendaryl said:
I didn't say what is being described is in free fall, I said that you're using freefall coordinates to describe it. You can use inertial coordinates to describe the motion of an object that is accelerating, and you can similarly use freefall coordinates to describe the motion of an object that is not in freefall.

As long as inertial and gravitational mass are equal. If they're not, then trying to set up freefall coordinates in the presence of gravity will fail. That's why I said I view the use of freefall coordinates as an aspect of (1). But it is, as I said, a matter of definition; what's really important is the physics and how we can usefully model the physics, and I agree that local inertial frames in curved spacetime are the key to doing that.

stevendaryl said:
If you know how the physics works in one coordinate system (freefall coordinates), you can certainly do a coordinate transformation to find out what the equations look like in another coordinate system (such as a coordinate system in which an object on the surface of the Earth is considered at rest). It's just a coordinate change, and that's just mathematics, not physics.

Agreed. But there still remains the question of what the result will actually look like when you do this, which is what the (2) part of the principle as the OP stated it is talking about, IMO. See below.

stevendaryl said:
The physical content is exhausted by saying that freefall coordinates are the same (locally, which basically means ignoring the variation of the metric tensor with location) as inertial coordinates.

No, this isn't enough by itself, because this doesn't tell you what, specifically, being at rest in a gravitational field looks like in freefall coordinates. That's what the (2) part of the principle is for: it tells you that being at rest in a gravitational field is equivalent to following a particular kind of accelerated worldline in a local inertial frame.

Remember that Einstein originally enunciated the equivalence principle before he had derived the Field Equation. Today we would first solve the Field Equation to derive the Schwarzschild solution, and then observe that an object at rest in Schwarzschild coordinates follows an accelerated hyperbola in a local inertial frame; but Einstein couldn't do that yet. So one way of looking at (2) is that it was Einstein trying to guess what a particular solution would look like to a field equation he hadn't yet derived.
 
  • #13
Well, if a free fall frame has the standard physics of SR locally, then it follows that any other frame will behave like an accelerated frame in SR. This is why modern authors use different (but essentially similar) EP's to Einstein. There are many categorizations used. The following is a common one, from: : http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/lrr-2006-3/fulltext.html


Weak Equivalence Principle:

"the trajectory of a freely falling “test” body (one not acted upon by such forces as electromagnetism and too small to be affected by tidal gravitational forces) is independent of its internal structure and composition. "

Einstein Equivalence Principle:
"1) WEP is valid.
2) The outcome of any local non-gravitational experiment is independent of the velocity of the freely-falling reference frame in which it is performed.
3) The outcome of any local non-gravitational experiment is independent of where and when in the universe it is performed."

Strong Equivalence Principle:

"1) WEP is valid for self-gravitating bodies as well as for test bodies.
2) The outcome of any local test experiment is independent of the velocity of the (freely falling) apparatus.
3) The outcome of any local test experiment is independent of where and when in the universe it is performed."
 
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  • #14
To PeterDonis -
After rereading my statement (2) and then reading yours, I think I found the problem. I restate (2) as follows:
A mass at rest in a frame is equivalent to being in a "gravitational field" when the frame is acclerating.

To PAllen: I will read your post and come back to you after I understand it.

To all: I will work out a text to explain without invoking POE: the bending of light beam, the speed of time, and the length of a rod in an acclerating rocket far from any mass; centrifugal force, and weightlessness. I will post it tomorrow.

The clearest exposition of POE is given by George Gamow in -- guess what -- one of his popularization-series book: Gravity, ch 9, Dover Pubs, 2002.

Thank all you.
 
  • #15
SinghRP said:
A mass at rest in a frame is equivalent to being in a "gravitational field" when the frame is acclerating.

Yes, I think this is OK.
 
  • #16
As I said before, here is my take on POE-related topics.

The principle of equivalence
The genesis of the principle of equivalence is in the following equation:

(Gravitational mass) ∙ (Gravitational field intensity) = (Inertial mass) ∙ (Acceleration) (1)

That is, a mass in a frame is equivalent to being in a “gravitational field” when the frame is accelerating.
We re-state (1) for an electrical charge:

(Electrical charge) ∙ (Electrical field intensity) = (Inertial mass) ∙ (Acceleration) (2)

That is, an electrical charge in a frame is similar to being in an “electrical field” when the frame is accelerating.
We make the following inferences:

(1) An observer studying a phenomenon in an accelerating frame, in the absence of external information, may need to invent a pseudofield in opposition to the acceleration to make sense of the phenomenon. (This is what classical physics says about a non-inertial observer applying Newton's law of motion.)

(2) Gravitational mass and gravitational field are respectively analogous to electrical charge and electrical field.

Bending of light beam
We take an accelerating rocket far from any mass. The rocket has an observer in it. We then examine what happens to a beam of light propagating across the rocket chamber from one wall to the other – from the point of view of the observer.
As the light beam traverses the rocket chamber, the observer is accelerating toward it. Relatively, the observer finds the light beam tracing a parabolic path and may conclude that gravity is present. In reality, however, the light beam itself never changed its direction as no gravity was mediated!
It is not necessary to invent pseudogravity opposite to the applied acceleration to explain the bending of light beams.

Weightlessness
There are two aspects to weight. In one aspect, the weight of a body is the force with which the Earth attracts it.
In the other aspect, weight is the “feeling” a body gets in gravitational field from the reaction force from the “floor” on which it rests; weightlessness is the feeling the body has when that reaction force is unavailable.
Weight may be increased or decreased by adding to or subtracting from the reaction force. In an ascending elevator, an observer feels heavier as an external upward force adds to the reaction force and may infer that more downward gravity is present. In reality, however, no new downward gravity was ever mediated!
While the elevator is in controlled (or free) descent, the gravitational attraction of the Earth is being “employed” partially (or wholly) in accelerating it downward; the observer in it gets reduced (or zero) reaction force, feels lighter (or weightless), and may infer that the earth’s downward gravity has been reduced (or cancelled) by a mysterious upward gravity. In reality, however, no new upward gravity was ever mediated!
It is not necessary to invent pseudogravity opposite to the applied acceleration to explain weightlessness.
Weight is real; weightlessness is apparent.

Centrifugal force
A force normal to a body’s uniform velocity keeps the body in a circular orbit; that force is called centripetal force.
A body in a satellite around the Earth is under the centripetal force of the earth’s gravity. The centripetal force is being “employed” wholly in keeping the satellite and the body in orbit; the body gets no reaction force and feels weightlessness.
A body on a merry-go-round must have three reaction agents to keep it in the place: a seat to push it up against the downward gravity; a backrest to accelerate it to the needed uniform tangential velocity; and a side rest to push it toward the center providing the needed centripetal force to keep it along the circle. When the centripetal force is turned off, the body moves along the tangent, not the radius, with the current velocity.
It is practical but not necessary to invent pseudogravity (centrifugal force) to cancel the centripetal force in order to avoid radial motion. A centripetal force may be of any type, such as electromagnetic.
Centripetal force is real; centrifugal force is fictitious.

Speed of time and length of rod
In an accelerating rocket far from any mass, an observer detects no changes in the run of the time of an atomic clock and in the length of a material rod, because no gravity is being mediated.
 
  • #17
To stevendaryl at Post 694:
The choice of word "equivalent" was unfortunate. As a matter of fact this word is not quite correct in the case of mass either.
In the case of mass -- the pseudo gravity field is equal in magnitude but opposite in direction to the accleration.
In the case of electric charge -- the pseudo electric field is not equal in magnitude but is opposite in direction to the accleration.
Thanks!

To PAllen at Post 3,628:
I understand the principles now. But I am still figuring out their utility.
Thanks!
 

What is the principle of equivalence?

The principle of equivalence is a fundamental concept in physics which states that the effects of gravity on an object are indistinguishable from the effects of acceleration on the same object.

What is the significance of the principle of equivalence?

The principle of equivalence is significant because it led to the development of Einstein's theory of general relativity, which revolutionized our understanding of gravity and space-time.

How does the principle of equivalence relate to the concept of inertia?

The principle of equivalence shows that the effects of gravity can be thought of as a form of inertia, where objects are forced to follow a curved path in space-time due to the presence of a massive object.

Are there any experimental evidence supporting the principle of equivalence?

Yes, there have been numerous experiments that have confirmed the validity of the principle of equivalence, including the famous Eötvös experiment which showed that all objects, regardless of their mass or composition, fall at the same rate in a gravitational field.

Does the principle of equivalence have any implications for the behavior of light?

Yes, the principle of equivalence predicts that light should be affected by gravity, just like any other object. This was confirmed by observations of the bending of starlight near the sun during a solar eclipse, providing further evidence for the validity of the principle of equivalence.

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