Vanadium 50 said:
Yes.
False. The equivalence principle explains how to distinguish between a particle in a gravitational field and one in uniform acceleration - that is, a gravitational field will have tides.
No. You have a history of pushing unconventional viewpoints. I sincerely hope this is not another attempt.
I have not followed this OPs other activity, but it sure seems like, for this particular question, he deserves more than a one word answer followed by chiding.This is a very famous paradox, and had been called a "perpetual problem".
Quoting from Alemida (attachment):
"The long-standing paradox about the electromagnetic
radiation emitted by a uniformly accelerated charge has received considerable attention. Eminent figures
such as Pauli, Born, Sommerfeld, Schott, von Laue, and many others have contributed to this debate with different
answers. The relevant questions we consider are: Does a uniformly accelerated charge actually radiate? In a constant
gravitational field should free-falling observers detect any radiation emitted by free-falling charges? Is the equivalence
principle valid for such situations?"I have posted some papers:
Boulware: Annals of Physics 124, 169-188 (1980) - Probably the most well known paper on this subject.
Singal: General Relativity and Gravitation, Vol. 27 No. 9, 1995 - Argues that no radiation occurs (mentioned by Andrew Mason).
Alemida, arXiv:physics/0506049v5, 2005 - fairly recent, includes some history of the debate.
Ch52:
http://rickbradford.co.uk/ChoiceCutsCh52.pdf - This is a very good survey of work on this topic, from Born in 1909 through Feynman in 1999.
The consensus right now is that uniformly accelerating charges probably radiate, but not everyone can see the radiation.
The various papers on this topic make it clear that part of the problem is in definition.
For example, what do we mean by "radiate".
According to the Boulware paper, and further in Alemida, a co-moving observer will not see any radiation from a uniformly accelerating charge,
even though the radiation exists, because it is outside of his event horizon and unobservable to him.