yuiop said:
I think we can agree that a slow down in angular velocity must be seen by an observer at infinity. In a more simplified scenario, we could imagine lowering a small flat rotating cylinder, which is effectively a clock and it will almost certainly slow down in accord with the gravitational time dilation factor.
I agree, but in order to justify this I would start with an even simpler situation, an accelerated rotating disk in flat spacetime. Suppose we have a disk that is rotating in the y-z plane in flat spacetime, and is accelerated linearly in the x direction. Since the acceleration is orthogonal to the plane of rotation, it should apply no torque to the disk (we assume the acceleration is applied at the disk's center of mass), so it should not change the angular velocity of the disk, as measured by an observer comoving with the disk. Therefore, an observer at rest in a global inertial frame, who starts out at rest with respect to the disk, will see the disk's angular velocity decrease as it accelerates away from him, according to the time dilation factor due to relative velocity.
yuiop said:
I an trying to get at the more interesting physical situation of two such flywheel clocks separated by a great height but connected by a rigid rod so that they are forced to spin at the same rate, but of course we have define what we mean by the same rate and who measures it and where it is measured.
Yes, this is an issue, and I would investigate this by considering the simpler case of two rotating disks in flat spacetime which are accelerated such that the proper distance between them, as seen by an observer comoving with either disk, remains constant. That means each disk is following a "Rindler observer" worldline: if both disks are accelerating in the positive x direction (and rotating in the y-z plane), then the disk with the smaller x coordinate will have the larger acceleration, and its "rate of time flow" will be slower, as seen by an observer comoving with either disk, than the "rate of time flow" of the disk with the larger x coordinate.
Let's assume first that the two disks are not physically connected, so they are each free to rotate; and let's also assume that each disk's angular velocity is the same, as seen by an observer comoving with that particular disk (i.e., the disks are identical as seen locally). How will their respective angular velocities compare, as seen by an observer comoving with either disk? It seems evident that the lower observer (the one with the smaller x coordinate) will see the upper disk rotating faster than his own, and the upper observer (the one with the larger x coordinate) will see the lower disk rotating slower than his own.
If this is correct, then if the two disks are connected by a fixed rigid rod, so that they are forced to spin at the same rate, as seen by an observer comoving with either disk, then the rod will experience a torsional stress, since the upper end of the rod will be "trying" to spin faster and the lower end of the rod will be "trying" to spin slower. The magnitude of the stress should depend on the difference in the "rate of time flow" between the disks, which in turn will depend on the proper distance between the disks (which will also be the proper length of the rod).
yuiop said:
Upon reflection, I agree. If it helps any, it seems that the angular momentum per unit mass is constant for a free falling particle as it spirals in towards a black hole, as long as the angular velocity is measured in terms of the proper time of the infalling particle. See
http://www.fourmilab.ch/gravitation/orbits/
This is orbital angular momentum, not spin angular momentum; orbital angular momentum is zero for purely radial trajectories, so the fact that it's a constant of the motion doesn't help here. (Also, it's only a constant for free-fall motion, as you note, and we're talking about accelerated motion.)
yuiop said:
So to conclude, does a local static observer see a change in the angular velocity of the part of the cylinder nearest him as the cylinder is lowered past him? Intuitively I think yes.
Let's see how this looks in the flat spacetime case I described above. Suppose we have an observer who, at some instant of his proper time, is co-located with the lower disk, but whose proper acceleration is slightly greater than that of the lower disk, so he is slowly moving "up" the rod from the lower disk to the upper disk. (We'll assume that we can make this observer's velocity relative to the disks constant; we're not really concerned with this observer's exact acceleration or velocity profile.) What will this observer see?
By hypothesis, both disks have the same angular velocity as seen by observers comoving with either disk (and the rod connecting them is experiencing a torsional stress, as above). But that does not mean that an observer comoving with the upper disk will see both disks spinning with the *same* angular velocity as an observer comoving with the lower disk; that can't be, since their rates of time flow differ. The lower disk observer should see both disks (and the rod) spinning with a *larger* angular velocity than the upper disk observer. Therefore, the third observer, who moves with a constant speed from the lower disk to the upper disk, should see the angular velocity of both disks (and the rod) relative to him *decrease*.
There are still some differences between this scenario and the curved spacetime scenario, so I'm not fully convinced that the argument I just gave carries over. See below.
yuiop said:
I am also guessing that an observer that remains local to the bottom of the cylinder as it lowered, will see the bottom speed up slightly and an observer that remains local to the top of the cylinder will see the the top slow down slightly as the cylinder is lowered.
I'm not sure how to get this out of the flat spacetime model above; in that model, the observers comoving with each disk see the angular velocity of the whole assembly as remaining constant (though the lower disk observer sees a larger constant angular velocity than the upper one, as above). But the way I modeled the "lowering" of the assembly isn't quite analogous to the curved spacetime case: in my flat spacetime model, the proper acceleration of each disk is constant, but in the curved spacetime "lowering" case, each disk's proper acceleration would be slowly increasing.
The problem with trying to extend the flat spacetime model to cover a slowly increasing proper acceleration of each disk is that it's not clear what to hold constant. What "remains the same" as the assembly is slowly lowered? The curved spacetime case has the same problem; what are you holding constant that allows you to guess the observations you guessed in the above quote?