Artlav
- 161
- 1
Good evening.
After reading about the recently created record-breaking precision quantum clocks i got thinking about how gravity affect time.
Suppose we have two clocks that are precise enough to register the gravity-induced difference of time rates at distances of a few meters up/down near Earth surface.
Would such a pair of clocks be a gravity detector?
I remember a quote, probably by Einstein, that no experiment could tell apart gravity field acceleration and regular acceleration from inside the system.
I'm particularly interested in the expected outcomes of these three experiments:
1. Two clocks one above other standing still on the surface. I expect them to show the corresponding difference.
2. The pair in free-fall around the same altitude. Would they register the difference?
3. The same pair standing as in 1, but inside a constantly accelerating spaceship in outer space. Would the clocks register anything?
After reading about the recently created record-breaking precision quantum clocks i got thinking about how gravity affect time.
Suppose we have two clocks that are precise enough to register the gravity-induced difference of time rates at distances of a few meters up/down near Earth surface.
Would such a pair of clocks be a gravity detector?
I remember a quote, probably by Einstein, that no experiment could tell apart gravity field acceleration and regular acceleration from inside the system.
I'm particularly interested in the expected outcomes of these three experiments:
1. Two clocks one above other standing still on the surface. I expect them to show the corresponding difference.
2. The pair in free-fall around the same altitude. Would they register the difference?
3. The same pair standing as in 1, but inside a constantly accelerating spaceship in outer space. Would the clocks register anything?