Wes Tausend
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A.T.,A.T. said:The movement of a piece of surface is frame dependent, but the surface definitely doesn't move outward as a whole because the radius is constant. The frame invariant proper acceleration of the surface doesn't imply movement.Wes Tausend said:In a nutshell, Equivalence principle. The earth, consisting of matter as cause, acts just as though it's surface is moving upward, or at least outward in an accelerated manner. The floor rises to meet "falling" objects.
"...The radius is constant"...
I find I must conveniently accept this convention too, but I'm not so sure it is that easy to confirm. For instance we may assume that there is no movement, no spatial change in space between and/or within the atoms forming the radius of earth, but how do we positively know that is true? Poincaré explored this very principle in his publication, The Relativity of Space, and it likely deserves it's own new thread. Afterall, students and members alike here, should expect extraordinary claims to require extraordinary proof.
Initially we could just firmly assert a steady radius as you have just done. But I suspect in the end we will have to rely solely on SR for our final proof.
As Einstein remarked in his thought experiment, the drawn chest, "would reach unheard of speeds". Yes, but we must insist, not faster than lightspeed. SR may our only salvation needed, or even available, to logically assert, "The frame invariant proper acceleration of the surface doesn't imply movement."
Per Poincaré, the possibility emerges that we may not in any other way, be able to otherwise derive an acceleration frozen in non-movement, which may be best simply explained by Poincaré himself, and we can discuss this in more depth in a new thread I have started, called Poincaré's Space Dilema. That title is based upon his astute thinking in his 1898 publication, The Relativity of Space.
A.T., I suggest you, and others, review and reply (if you wish) to my post in the new thread (Poincaré's Space Dilema link above) to avoid derailing the OP's thread.
Wes
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