Aditya Vishwak
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Is there a way by which we can prove that acceleration and gravity are really the same?
elegysix said:If gravity were acceleration, then the radius of Earth would have to be expanding with an acceleration of 9.8 m/s^2, and we would have been very confused when we measured it from higher altitudes.
Aditya Vishwak said:So how does the curvature of space-time gives birth to gravity?
MikeGomez said:acceleration due to gravity is exactly the same as acceleration due to any other force.
The radius is constant. But a reference frame at rest on the surface has a proper acceleration of 9.8m/s^2 upwards. Any accelerometer will confirm this:elegysix said:So if we try to say that acceleration due to gravity was actually caused by Earth's radius expanding with an acceleration of 9.8m/s^2...
The Equivalence principle states a local equivalence. The proper acceleration of local hovering reference frames varies with position:elegysix said:...we would have no explanation for why the acceleration at higher altitudes was less than at the surface.
elegysix said:Yes acceleration is acceleration, however the way in which gravity accelerates objects is a function of distance (inverse square).
MikeGomez said:Radiation also falls off as the inverse square, if originating from a sphere.
WannabeNewton said:The intensity falls off as inverse square but the radiation field itself in the far field zone goes like ##1/r##.
MikeGomez said:Long live Jimmy Page...
WannabeNewton said:The intensity falls off as inverse square but the radiation field itself in the far field zone goes like ##1/r##.
Drakkith said:Can you elaborate on this? What's the difference between the intensity and the "radiation field itself"?
What does 'body emitting gravity' mean?MikeGomez said:Gravity does not accelerate objects by the inverse square law. The inverse square law is due to the 3D geometrical arrangement of mass. A body emitting gravity is like a body emitting radiation. Radiation also falls off as the inverse square, if originating from a sphere. The reason there is less measured radiation at a further distance is because there is the same amount of radiation being measured for a larger area.
Its the same situation for gravity. It falls off as the inverse square if originated from a sphere, as 1/r if originating from a cylinder or line, and it does not fall off at all if originated from an infinite plane.
In the case of radiation, even though the radiation falls off as the inverse square law, we can think of it as composed as individual photons. The amount of photons falls off as the inverse square, but the individual photons remain the same (except in extreme cases where there are relativistic effects like red/blue shift).
MikeGomez said:I'm pretty sure that gravity works just fine without curvature.
Sir, can you please elaborate the statement. It seems interesting:thumbs:elegysix said:Yes, you are correct. I was assuming the gravitational acceleration due to an approximately spherical object such as earth, since that is what my thought experiment entailed.
I suppose to make my statement more general, for the case of a body undergoing constant linear acceleration the derivative of acceleration with respect to position is zero. However, for the acceleration due to Earth's gravity, the derivative with respect to position is not zero. This causes a difference in acceleration based on position. In the thought experiment I posted earlier, this would be the source of the confusion I mentioned.
MikeGomez said:I'm pretty sure that gravity works just fine without curvature.
Aditya Vishwak said:How?
DrGreg said:![]()
- Two inertial particles, at rest relative to each other, in flat spacetime (i.e. no gravity), shown with inertial coordinates. Drawn as a red distance-time graph on a flat piece of paper with blue gridlines.
- B1. The same particles in the same flat spacetime, but shown with non-inertial coordinates. Drawn as the same distance-time graph on an identical flat piece of paper except it has different gridlines.
B2. Take the flat piece of paper depicted in B1, cut out the grid with some scissors, and wrap it round a cone. Nothing within the intrinsic geometry of the paper has changed by doing this, so B2 shows exactly the same thing as B1, just presented in a different way, showing how the red lines could be perceived as looking "curved" against a "straight" grid.
- Two free-falling particles, initially at rest relative to each other, in curved spacetime (i.e. with gravity), shown with non-inertial coordinates. This cannot be drawn to scale on a flat piece of paper; you have to draw it on a curved surface instead. Note how C looks rather similar to B2. This is the equivalence principle in action: if you zoomed in very close to B2 and C, you wouldn't notice any difference between them.
Aditya Vishwak said:Sir, can you please elaborate the statement. It seems interesting:thumbs:
Nobody suggested that the radius of Earth is increasing, so you are arguing against straw man. The surface of the Earth has a proper acceleration of 9.8m/s^2 away from the center. But in curved space-time that doesn't imply actual movement away from the center.elegysix said:if the radius of Earth was increasing with an acceleration of 9.8m/s^2...
I mentioned these concepts only to address your misleading talk about an increasing Earth radius. But they are in fact related to the Equivalence principle, which is the OP asks about.elegysix said:I find proper acceleration or curved space-time to be more confusing than helpful in this discussion.
Why should the momentum of each ball be identical, if they bounce around randomly?LitleBang said:We shake the sphere to start the balls bouncing around inside... and obviously we find that the momentum of each ball is identical.
Gravity and gravitational time dilation are closely related in General Relativity.LitleBang said:Can someone show me why this does not imply that gravity is just an artifact of time dilation?
MikeGomez said:Not quite. Due to the equivalence principle (in the absence of tidal forces) acceleration due to gravity is exactly the same as acceleration due to any other force. The source of the earth’s gravity is the energy of its components, as per the stress-energy tensor...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress–energy_tensor
Geez. Nice anaolgy.stevendaryl said:"... if you are accelerating due to any force--say, a rope is pulling on your neck--you feel stresses due to the accelerating force.
stevendaryl said:Acceleration due to gravity means falling, and that is very different from any other kind of acceleration in that it doesn't put any stress on the object that is accelerating
The equivalence principle says that there is no experiment that you can perform which will tell you whether you are accelerating due to gravity or because you are in an accelerating chest. If there is no experiment that you can perform which can distinguish one situation from the other, then what sense is there to say that the two situations are different? If tomorrow a brilliant scientist demonstrates some new experimentally verifiable insight into gravity, then it will surely apply to acceleration, and vice versa. In my opinion to imagine otherwise is to defy the equivalence principle.stevendaryl said:What the equivalence principle says is that freefall--that is, accelerating solely due to gravity, and no other forces acting on you--is equivalent to inertial motion (drifting at constant velocity in the absence of any forces at all). Alternatively, the equivalence principle can be stated in terms of noninertial reference frames: The physics inside a room at rest in a gravitational field is the same as the physics inside a room that is on board an accelerating rocket. Once again, these equivalences are only true in the limit that the variation in gravity with location, or the variation in "g-forces" in a rocket, can be ignored.
MikeGomez said:The equivalence principle says that there is no experiment that you can perform which will tell you whether you are accelerating due to gravity or because you are in an accelerating chest.
A.T. said:"Accelerating due to gravity" (coordinate-acceleration in free fall) is not equivalent to an "accelerating chest" (rocket in space with engines on).
If you meant something else, they you should be more clear and explicitly distinguish between proper-acceleration and coordinate-acceleration.
MikeGomez said:You seem to have some kind of a grudge against me for some reason. I will be happy to have a discussion regading coordinate acceleration versus proper acceleration with stevendaryl or someone else, but not with you.
MikeGomez said:Acceleration due to gravity originates from energy. Tidal stresses are due to the spherical configuration of mass, and are not the source of gravity. Are you talking about non-tidal stresses?
The equivalence principle says that there is no experiment that you can perform which will tell you whether you are accelerating due to gravity or because you are in an accelerating chest.
MikeGomez said:You seem to have some kind of a grudge against me for some reason. I will be happy to have a discussion regading coordinate acceleration versus proper acceleration with stevendaryl or someone else, but not with you.
stevendaryl said:...
Here are 4 situations:
- Being stationary (that is, NOT accelerating) in a gravitational field (for example, you're standing on a platform that is stationary on a planet).
- Accelerating due to a rocket in gravity-free space (for example, you're standing on a platform that is on board an accelerating rocket).
- Falling (that is, accelerating downward) due to gravity.
- Floating inertially (that is, not accelerating) in gravity-free space.
The principle of equivalence says that situation 1, which does not involve acceleration, is equivalent to case 2, which does involve acceleration. It says that situation 3, which involves acceleration, is equivalent to case 4, which does not.
It seemed to me that you were saying that cases 2 and 3 were equivalent, that acceleration due to gravity is equivalent to acceleration due to a rocket. That's absolutely not the case.
Maybe the difficulty is with the definition of "acceleration". If you define acceleration to be the second time derivative of the position (coordinate acceleration), then cases 2 and 3 involve acceleration, but cases 1 and 4 do not.
...
MikeGomez said:On the other hand, to say that case #3 (freefall) is not equivalent to case #2 (proper acceleration) because #3 is not acceleration, or that #3 should be called “coordinate” acceleration, is puzzling to me.
It’s not that I am totally against the idea, it’s just that I would like a reasonable explanation. The example of an accelerometer not measuring acceleration in freefall is complete rubbish.
The apparatus is used in this example to take a measurement for which it was not designed. It’s like using carbon-14 dating on a live specimen.
MikeGomez said:It’s not that I am totally against the idea, it’s just that I would like a reasonable explanation.
stevendaryl said:Here's a simple model for an accelerometer: You have a cubic box. In the middle of the box is a massive metal ball. It is held in place in the center of the box by 6 identical springs connecting the ball to each of the 6 sides of the box.
When you accelerate, the ball will move from the center. By measuring the lengths of the 6 springs, you can compute what the acceleration vector is.
stevendaryl said:An explanation for why the equivalence principle is true?
stevendaryl said:gravity accelerates all parts of your body equally
stevendaryl said:It's not complete rubbish
MikeGomez said:Thank you. I know how an accelerometer works.
Seriously? No. I wasn't asking for an explanation of the equivalence principle. I was asking for a better explanation (than the falling accelerometer) of why case #3 should not be called acceleration, but must be called "coordinate" acceleration.
So you honestly don't see fallacy in the accelerometer example?
I'm still not convinced.
I also fail to see the fallacy. It is simply a matter of definition. By definition "coordinate acceleration" is the second derivative of position wrt time. By definition "proper acceleration" is the second covariant derivative along the worldline (physically the acceleration as measured by a correctly functioning accelerometer). There are cases where the two definitions coincide and cases where they do not coincide, nothing fallacious about that.MikeGomez said:I was asking for a better explanation (than the falling accelerometer) of why case #3 should not be called acceleration, but must be called "coordinate" acceleration.
So you honestly don't see falacy in the accelerometer example?
stevendaryl said:No, I have no idea what you are talking about when you say there is a fallacy involved.
DaleSpam said:...
By definition "coordinate acceleration" is the second derivative of position wrt time. By definition "proper acceleration" is the second covariant derivative along the worldline
(physically the acceleration as measured by a correctly functioning accelerometer). There are cases where the two definitions coincide and cases where they do not coincide, nothing fallacious about that.
MikeGomez said:Here’s a picture.
Accelerometer A is at rest in the lab frame produces no reading (no compression or tension in the springs.
Accelerometer B is being accelerated from the outside of the box (as designed) and therefore gives a reading.
Accelerometer C is being accelerated with the same force as Accelerometer B, but in a manner in which the apparatus was not designed for. I have opened the lid of the box, and I have accelerated it evenly so that there is no tension/compression in the springs. I couldn’t draw it very well, but you can imagine, at least in principle, that every unit of mass is accelerated.
I believe that at a fundamental level, every unit of mass in accelerometer 'C' gains momentum in precisely the same way as it would by gravity in free fall. I could be mistaken, but that is how I currently understand it. So when I say "Accelerating due to gravity" (coordinate-acceleration in free fall) is equivalent to an "accelerating chest", that is my reasoning.
On the other hand, what would you think if I were to tell you that accelerometer C is not accelerated because it shows no reading? Doesn’t that sound silly?
So why should that same situation (the misuse of the apparatus) suddenly start making sense simply because the accelerometer is in freefall?
Hopefully that explains why I believe the accelerometer in freefall explation is bunk. If not, oh well.
MikeGomez said:O.k. Thank you for that. I guess in my example, case 'C' is the case where they coincide?
I am not 100% clear on your example C, but in simplified terms if a force is proportional to mass then it can be geometrized. That means that it can be lumped into the same category as the centrifugal and Coriolis forces in a rotating reference frame, and canceled out by a coordinate transform in the same way. The proper acceleration is given by a covariant derivative, so it cannot be canceled by a coordinate transform.MikeGomez said:O.k. Thank you for that. I guess in my example, case 'C' is the case where they coincide?
The point is that you can't design a local measurement of coordinate acceleration due to gravity. Maybe this video will help you:MikeGomez said:The apparatus is used in this example to take a measurement for which it was not designed.
HALON said:I also found the video good value. It made me think of this question:
Body A at rest on planet X’s surface experiences gravity equivalently to body B undergoing acceleration not near any major sources of gravity in open space.
What is the formula used to convert B’s acceleration to X’s mass?