Einstein Elevator: Time Dilation Questions Answered

In summary: I'll just round it up to:##F = G \frac{5.97237 * 1024 * \text{my weight} * kg }{6378.100m^2}##Now, in an elevator, both your head and your feet will accelerate at the exact same rate. My feet is at 6200 km from the Earth center and my head is at 6200 + 1.7m. Even in Newton gravity formula my head wouldn't feel 9.8m/s2. Perhaps 9.7999999 something m/s2?Yes, and it's worth taking a moment to calculate roughly what the difference might be.
  • #1
Stephanus
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Dear PF Forum,
I have a question regarding Einstein Elevator, which I believe there are many topics about this. But I haven't got the answer.
I've watched some youtube video or read about it, I forgot. That our head is wiser than our foot, because time slow for our foot.
Okay..., this could have been something in GR formula. My feet is at 6200 km from the Earth center and my head is at 6200 + 1.7m. Even in Newton gravity formula my head wouldn't feel 9.8m/s2. Perhaps 9.7999999 something m/s2?
Now in Einstein elevator. Would our head be older than our feet? Since there's no gravity there.
And our head would be accelerated 9.8 m/s2 just as our feet?
Thank you very much.
 
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  • #2
I forgot to add another paragraph.
I ask this because I remember that in Einstein elevator, if someone one the top floor shine a light bulb, the receiver from the bottom receives slightly more signal than a receiver from the top.
Would the effect happens EXACTLY as on earth?
Thank you very much.
This is the question that I'd like to know actually.
 
  • #3
Stephanus said:
Would the effect happens EXACTLY as on earth?
No, not quite exactly. And the reason is what you identified in your first thread, that the gravitational force at you feet is very slightly greater than at your head. That is a tidal effect.

The equivalence principle that says being in an accelerating elevator is like being in a gravitational field only applies when tidal effects are small enough to ignore.
 
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  • #4
Stephanus said:
My feet is at 6200 km from the Earth center and my head is at 6200 + 1.7m. Even in Newton gravity formula my head wouldn't feel 9.8m/s2. Perhaps 9.7999999 something m/s2?
Yes, and it's worth taking a moment to calculate roughly what the difference might be.

Now in Einstein elevator. Would our head be older than our feet? Since there's no gravity there.
And our head would be accelerated 9.8 m/s2 just as our feet?
in the elevator, both your head and your feet will accelerate at the exact same rate.
 
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Likes Stephanus
  • #5
Stephanus said:
Dear PF Forum,
I have a question regarding Einstein Elevator, which I believe there are many topics about this. But I haven't got the answer.
I've watched some youtube video or read about it, I forgot. That our head is wiser than our foot, because time slow for our foot.
Okay..., this could have been something in GR formula. My feet is at 6200 km from the Earth center and my head is at 6200 + 1.7m. Even in Newton gravity formula my head wouldn't feel 9.8m/s2. Perhaps 9.7999999 something m/s2?
Now in Einstein elevator. Would our head be older than our feet? Since there's no gravity there.
And our head would be accelerated 9.8 m/s2 just as our feet?
Thank you very much.

The thing to keep in mind is that the difference between time rate of your head and your feet is not related to the difference in g force they experience, but to the difference in potential, or how much work it would take to move a test mass from one point to another. Since g force falls off with height on the Earth, you would have to figure that in when determining the difference in potential and the time difference for the person standing on Earth. On the other hand, for the person in the elevator, g-force does not fall off between feet. In other words, it would take more energy to lift a test mass from floor to head height in the Elevator than it would on the Earth, and thus the time rate difference in the elevator would be the greater of the two.
 
  • #6
Thank you very much
Nugatory said:
Stephanus said:
...My feet is at 6200 km from the Earth center and my head is at 6200 + 1.7m. Even in Newton gravity formula my head wouldn't feel 9.8m/s2. Perhaps 9.7999999 something m/s2?
Yes, and it's worth taking a moment to calculate roughly what the difference might be...
Okay...
The Earth radius from equator is 6378.1 km, let's call it r
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth
or 6378.100m

This is what makes me irritated. I'm calculating 1.7 m against a 0.1 km rounding. But, I'll do it anyway
I live in Jakarta 6° 8'59.61"S 106°42'9.06"E (Google Earth)
Frankly I can't calculate how far I'm from the center of the earth, considering I'm not exactly in the equator, but closely enough. More over, I don't know how high my house from the sea level. Heck, even my house is some 50cm higher than the road in front of it. But, I'll do it anyway.

First of all, the gravitational constant:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_constant
6.674 * 10-11 * N * m2/kg2 let's call it G

The mass of the earth: 5.97237×1024 kg, let's call it M
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth

So the force of gravity, let's call it F for me (my feet) and Earth from 6378.km is...
##F = G \frac{M * \text{my weight} * kg }{r^2}## not that I don't want to disclose my weight :smile:. But surely the staffs/mentors who read this will understand why M2 is not important :smile:
##F = 6.674 * 10^{-11} N * \frac{m^{2}}{kg^2} \frac{5.97237 * 10 ^ {24}\text{kg} * \text{my weight} * kg}{6378100^2 m^2}##
##F = 9.80627 * N * \frac{m^{2}}{kg^2} * \frac{1 \text{ kg} * \text{my weight} kg}{m^2}##
##F = 9.80627 * N * \text{my weight}##
So, this is the force that is needed to keep me standing on the ground.
How much acceleration is experienced for an object as heavy as me if applied this number of force?
Because force is mass * acceleration, and Newton is in Kg * m / t2, or F = m * a, a =F/m, so...
##a = \frac{9.80627 * kg * \frac{m}{t^2} * \text{my weight}}{\text{my weight } kg}##
##a = 9.80627 * \frac{m}{t^2}##
So, this is the acceleration that is felt by my feet.
What is the acceleration felt by my head?
I don't have to go through all the calculation above, just this one
##F = ... \frac{...}{(r+1.7m)^2}##
##a_{head} = 9.80627 * \frac{6378100^2}{6378101.7^2}##
##a_{head} = 9.806264773##
##a_{feet} = 9.80627##
I don't know if my calculation is correct.
Thanks for the attentions.
 
  • #7
  • #8
Janus said:
The thing to keep in mind is that the difference between time rate of your head and your feet is not related to the difference in g force they experience, but to the difference in potential, or how much work it would take to move a test mass from one point to another.
So..., the time rate differs depending on acceleration. No gravity involved?
Is this GR or SR concept?

Janus said:
Since g force falls off with height on the Earth, you would have to figure that in when determining the difference in potential and the time difference for the person standing on Earth. On the other hand, for the person in the elevator, g-force does not fall off between feet. In other words, it would take more energy to lift a test mass from floor to head height in the Elevator than it would on the Earth, and thus the time rate difference in the elevator would be the greater of the two.
Just for an instant I thought Einstein elevator has anything to do with Bell's Paradox. But it's not, right. Because in Bell's Paradox, the distance wrt a rest observer stays the same, though there's acceleration involved.
 
  • #9
Janus said:
For better accuracy, you can use 3.986004414e14 for GM, for which we actually have a more accurate value than for either G or M separately.
Ok, thanks. Then we only need to calculate distance only.
 
  • #10
Stephanus said:
So..., the time rate differs depending on acceleration. No gravity involved?
Is this GR or SR concept?

The time rate differs by the difference in potential. On the Earth that difference is due to gravity, in the elevator it is due to acceleration.
 

What is the Einstein Elevator thought experiment?

The Einstein Elevator is a thought experiment used to explain the concept of time dilation, which is a phenomenon predicted by Albert Einstein's theory of relativity.

How does the Einstein Elevator demonstrate time dilation?

In the thought experiment, a person is standing in an elevator that is accelerating at a constant rate. According to Einstein's theory, time will appear to move slower for the person in the elevator compared to someone outside the elevator. This is because the acceleration of the elevator causes a change in the curvature of space-time, resulting in time dilation.

What is the significance of time dilation in the Einstein Elevator experiment?

The Einstein Elevator thought experiment helps us understand the concept of time dilation, which is a fundamental aspect of Einstein's theory of relativity. It shows that time is not absolute, but rather, it can be affected by factors such as acceleration and gravity.

Can time dilation be observed in real life?

Yes, time dilation has been observed in various experiments and is a well-established phenomenon in physics. For example, the Global Positioning System (GPS) satellites have to account for time dilation in order to accurately calculate positions on Earth.

Does time dilation only occur in elevators?

No, time dilation can occur in any situation where there is acceleration or gravity. This includes objects in orbit, high-speed travel, and even at a microscopic level. The Einstein Elevator thought experiment is just one example of how time dilation can be demonstrated.

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