JesseM
Science Advisor
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But unless the rod is made up of noninteracting dust particles, every part of it won't really be moving in a locally inertial way (freely-falling), since different sections can push and pull on one another.Zanket said:The rod I’m talking about is freely falling. By the definition of “freely falling object”, no forces except gravity are acting on the rod. Then if the rod breaks, it must be the tidal force that broke it, because the only force of gravity in GR is the tidal force.
No, I think you're wrong on this. As long as the different parts of the rod interact with each other they won't all be freely-falling, so you don't have to assume it's tidal forces that break the rod. We know that in the case of a rod being dragged along by an accelerating observer, the rod also must break if it extends past the observer's Rindler horizon, and yet this is a flat spacetime situation with no tidal forces.Zanket said:Yes, GR says that the tidal force always disappears in the limit locally, but GR also predicts that the tidal force must be what breaks the rod if it breaks, by disallowing any other possibility.