Free Fall Acceleration: Better Term?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the term "free fall" and its implications in physics. Participants explore the definition of free fall, questioning whether it accurately describes scenarios where objects may not be falling in the traditional sense, such as when they are rising or moving sideways. The conversation includes theoretical considerations from both Newtonian mechanics and general relativity.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants argue that "free fall" is misleading because it implies that an object must be falling, while others suggest that an object can be in free fall even when it is rising, as long as gravity is the only force acting on it.
  • One participant proposes that "geodesic motion" could be a more accurate term, referencing general relativity where free fall is described as following a geodesic in curved spacetime.
  • Another suggestion is to use "inertial motion," although some participants challenge this by stating that inertial motion implies no forces acting on the object.
  • Participants discuss specific examples, such as a baseball thrown upwards or a satellite in orbit, to illustrate their points about free fall and the forces acting on these objects.
  • There is a contention regarding the definition of free fall, with some asserting that it strictly means no forces other than gravity, while others argue that it can include scenarios where objects are moving upwards or sideways.
  • One participant mentions the term "free float" as an alternative to describe the state of an object in free fall without experiencing gravitational acceleration.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on a better term for "free fall." There are multiple competing views regarding the definition and implications of free fall, with ongoing debate about whether it accurately describes various motion scenarios.

Contextual Notes

Some participants note that the term "free fall" may mislead students, particularly in the context of satellites in orbit, where the distance from Earth does not change despite being in free fall. The discussion also highlights the nuances in definitions and assumptions regarding forces acting on objects in motion.

JohnDubYa
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We have already discussed the definition of g to death, but I have another question regarding the use of "free fall." This is also a term that is misleading, since a body doesn't have to be falling to be truly in free-fall.

Can anyone come up with a better term?
 
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please explain what could be in freefall without falling
 
An object rising.
 
? then it won't be falling...
 
and if something is rising, then ur going against gravity, which is something completely different
 
When it is rising the object, let's say a rock, is still considered to be in the "free fall" scenario. This is because even though it is has been given enough force to counteract its weight, gravity is still doing work on the rock. So you could say it is falling in the negative direction. This is what JohnDubYa is trying to say i think. The term free fall is not a very good term because it gives us the impression that the object must be falling.
 
To be in "free fall" means to have no forces other than gravity acting upon you. In the parlance of general relativity, it means you're following a geodesic (a straightest-possible line) through curved spacetime.

Perhaps you should just call it "geodesic motion."

- Warren
 
hum...good point, it accelerates upwards but negatively, -9.81m/s^2.
 
RE: "then it won't be falling..."

Precisely the problem.
 
  • #10
Consider also just calling it "inertial motion."

- Warren
 
  • #11
I would think inertial motion would apply where NO forces act on the object.
 
  • #12
No, an inertial frame is one in which Newton's laws hold. In the parlance of general relativity, gravity is not a force. The only situations that forces are involved are those situations in which a body is not allowed to follow its natural trajectory. The chair you're sitting on is preventing you from following the trajectory you'd otherwise follow, onto the ground. When you're freely falling, you don't feel your own weight, which means no forces are acting upon you.

Einstein's principle of equivalence states quite simply that the physics in an inertial frame is indistinguishable from that in a freely falling frame -- so calling free fall "inertial motion" is entirely valid.

- Warren
 
  • #13
In the context of Newtonian mechanics, a "free-falling projectile" is falling with respect to an object starting at the launch point and moving with constant velocity equal to the projectile's launch velocity. Pictorially, draw the projectile's parabolic trajectory and the tangent line to that parabola at the launch point.
 
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  • #14
I am not saying that "free fall acceleration" is inaccurate, but simply misleading.
 
  • #15
I guess the problem is that "falling" suggests decreasing.

Thinking about it more, it seems to me that what is falling (decreasing) is the y-velocity. As the y-velocity decreases, one can picture the velocity vector turning downwards.

In terms of the trajectory itself, it seems that one may need to capture the notion of "concave down".
 
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  • #16
Well, that assumes the object isn't thrown perfectly vertical. :)
 
  • #17
how about ...gravity acceleration :D
 
  • #18
The definition of freefall is "no other forces are acting on it apart from gravity".
so therefore it could not be rising, going sideways or anything else but falling
 
  • #19
Sure it could; A sattelite going to a higher orbit burns its engine for a relatively short period of time, then the engine is shut off. But the sattelite is still gaining altitude (relative to the Earth's surface). It is, quite litterally, "falling up". Once the transfer orbit burn is finished, no force (other than the pseudoforce of gravity) is acting on the sattelite, but it continues to climb.
 
  • #20
Or, even simpler, consider the first half of a baseball's trajectory, just after you've thrown it. It's going away from the earth, but is acted upon by no other forces besides gravity. It is therefore in free-fall.

- Warren
 
  • #21
There is still a force acting against gravity so therefore it is not in freefall
 
  • #22
jamie said:
There is still a force acting against gravity so therefore it is not in freefall
And what force would that be (ignoring air resistance)?
 
  • #23
In a books on s. relativity by John A. Wheeler (Spacetime Physics, Freeman) the frame in which no gravitational acceleration is experienced is referred to as the "free float frame". I think the frame is officially called inertial or Lorentz frame, but free float is pretty good.

Why not call free fall "free float" in the general case?

//Cheers
 
  • #24
could it be momentum?
 
  • #25
jamie said:
could it be momentum?
Could what be momentum? Momentum is not a force.
 
  • #26
momentum is defined as the mass x velocity
p=mv
so therefore a force applied to it would give it momentum
and you are quite right momentum is not a force
 
  • #27
You still haven't answered the question -- what forces, besides gravity, act on a baseball that has just been tossed upwards? (Neglecting wind resistance.)

- Warren
 
  • #28
We have kind of lost track
firstly the force that has been exerted to get it going up in the first place and while it is going up it is not in freefall
 
  • #29
The force that made it go up in the first place stops acting on it as soon as it leaves your hand, and is not relevant.

By the definition of free-fall, the ball is in free-fall from the time it leaves your hand to the time it strikes the ground.

- Warren
 
  • #30
all free-falling objects (on Earth) accelerate downwards at a rate of approximately 10 m/s/s (to be exact, 9.8 m/s/s)
A free-falling object is an object which is falling under the sole influence of gravity.
so back to the question how can it be in freefall if it is acting against gravity, ie going up
 

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