You were, in fact, given correct answers.
jim77 said:
1).No. Gravity does not "constrict motion
Increased gravity would increase the friction at the pivot of a pendulum thus constricting the motion of a pendulum.
First, that would be friction constricting the motion, not gravity. And second, both the friction and the weight would increase with increasing gravity, so it is not clear that there would be any constriction of motion at all.
jim77 said:
2) The period is a function of their length only (and g, but we're on Earth)
My question was about gravity on anybody so g is not a constant
Fair enough, but increasing g makes a pendulum go faster, so it is the opposite direction from what is needed to explain gravitational time dilation. (As well as being the wrong magnitude, and not proportional to small changes in height)
jim77 said:
3).and this of course would not explain time dilation due to motion.
It would explain time dilation due to acceleration since gravity can't be differentiated from acceleration.
No, it wouldn’t. Again, it is the wrong direction, the wrong amount, and the wrong dependency on height.
jim77 said:
4) You never addressed the point of gravity decreasing the period of light waves via redshift. If Gravity can do this isn't it plausible that it could decrease the period of electrons in a cesium atom used to measure time dilation.
It increases the period, not decreases. And yes, it is not only plausible that atomic clocks experience gravitational time dilation, it has been experimentally confirmed thus validating GR which predicted the correct direction, magnitude, and dependence on height of the effect, as well as the motion dependence.
jim77 said:
I've got to say in all humility you guys don't have a lot of patience for a layman trying to understand this stuff.
Speaking bluntly, in your posts above you do not appear as a layman trying to learn this stuff. You appear as someone who has already developed a personal theory on this stuff. This “I call BS” post furthers the impression of someone who is not interested in learning, but is more interested in pushing a personal theory.
We do not tolerate personal theories here, as is clearly stated in the rules. Most personal theories are, like yours, so fabulously wrong that they are a complete waste of time for all involved. They irritate the experts and the discussion does not further our educational mission even for the proponent of the personal theory. Very little is gained by having people correct personal theories, and the proposer frequently takes umbrage at the substantive criticism, as you have.
If you really are “trying to understand this stuff” then PF will be a tremendous resource for you. Feel free to ask questions about mainstream scientific theories. We will be glad to answer such questions and teach you physics. We will not, however, entertain personal speculation.
This thread is closed.