yuiop said:
Isn't there a problem with this, in that clocks lower down in an accelerating rocket will tick slower and red shift relative to clocks higher up in the rocket even in the rocket is accelerating in flat space? In other words, differential clock rates due differences in "height" does not seem in itself to be proof of intrinsic spacetime curvature.
We could claim that the clocks run at a different rate because of the difference in curvature (that is path curvature, not spacetime curvature) of the worldlines, just like in the case of an accelerating rocket.
However in curved spacetime there is of course an additional factor.
Consider the moment when a free falling observer and a stationary observer are both at location r=4 in a Schwarzschild solution where m=1/2, then:
The stationary observer measures a distance to the EH of
<br />
\sqrt {r \left( r-1 \right) }+\ln \left( \sqrt {r}+\sqrt {r-1}<br />
\right) = 4.781059513<br />
The free falling observer measures a distance of 3 while the Fermi normal distance is: 3.488654305.
The local velocity between the stationary and free falling observer is:
<br />
\sqrt {{r}^{-1}} = 0.5<br />
So if we (of course falsely) assume for a moment that spacetime is flat we would expect the distance to the EH for the free falling observer from the perspective of the stationary observer to be simply the Lorentz contracted distance. However this is not the case, as shown as follows:
The Lorentz factor becomes:
<br />
{\frac {1}{\sqrt {1-{v}^{2}}}} = 1.154700538<br />
And thus the (assuming flat spacetime) distance would be:
4.781059513 / 1.154700538 = 4.140518997
Which is different from 3 (or a Fermi normal distance of: 3.488654305) as measured by the free falling observer.
And from the perspective of the free falling observer when applying the reverse Lorentz factor he calculates a distance of 3.464101617 (or 4.028351006 from the perspective of a Fermi normal distance) as opposed to 4.781059513.
So in a Schwarzschild spacetime we see a kind of 'bifurcation' of spatial distances. This by the way also demonstrates that Lorentz covariance applies only locally in GR.
Here is a demonstration of this, the graphs are a little complicated, notice that the Y axis is Distance/Schwarzschild Coordinate -1:
[PLAIN]http://img258.imageshack.us/img258/7867/001bifurcation2.gif [PLAIN]http://img245.imageshack.us/img245/4461/001bifurcation1.gif