my_wan said:
There are situations where two inertial observer with no relative motion between them can nonetheless have differing clock rates wrt each other. Also there are situations where a non-inertial observer and an inertial observer with a constant distance between them will have the same clock rate wrt each other.
This and your following explanation are primarily about GR. My suspicion is the OP was thinking about SR, but that is not clear. More to the point, none of your scenarios resemble the OP, so I am afraid all of this will be a confusing distraction from their question.
I will assume by 'clock rate between observers' you mean something not some arbitrary coordinate dependent quantity, but something invariant like the result of sending uniformly timed signals to each other.
my_wan said:
Place observer A inside a uniform massive hollow sphere, such that for A there is no local gravitational acceleration. Place observer B, at a constant distance from A, on the surface of the sphere. Place observer C, at a constant distance from A and B, in a position far removed from this mass.
1) All observers will agree that B's clock is slower than C's clock, though not necessarily by how much, due to gravitational time dilation.
This confuses things. If you mean the invariant comparison I described, it is independent of all coordinates or choice of extra observer. If you really mean to allow any choice of observer, using their own observation of B and C clock rate (rather than computing what B and C mutually observe exchanging signals), then this is false. An observer rapidly approaching B from C will observe B to be going faster than C.
my_wan said:
2) A and B will agree that their clocks share a common relative rate, even though A is an inertial observer and B is not.
This is not true in any sense. B on the outside of the shell will be at higher potential than A inside the shell (unless the shell is massless, in which case the whole scenario is vacuous).
my_wan said:
3) A's clock will be slowed relative to C's clock even though they maintain a constant relative distance and both are inertial observers.
This is certainly true in the invariant sense I described.
my_wan said:
In cases involving gravity the distinction between gravitational depth and curvature is often overlooked.
Overlooked by who? It is extremely well known that for static GR solutions you can define a potential that predicts clock comparisons.
my_wan said:
Gravitational time dilation is the consequence of gravitational depth, not curvature. What time dilation is caused by curvature is a product of SR, and the result of gravitational acceleration imparting a relative velocity.
It is worth emphasizing that the ability to even define 'gravitational time dilation' and gravitational potential (better word than depth) requires a static GR solution. For general GR solutions it is impossible to define these things. Except as a computational convenience for static solutions, there is really a single form of clock comparison in GR that covers all solutions, all cases: parallel transport 4-velocity of world line 1 tangent along null geodesic to world line 2; express transported 4-velocity and null geodesic propagation vector in local frame of reception event on world line 2; apply SR doppler formula. This gives observed clock comparison (and Doppler) for any circumstance at all: rapidly rotating binaries; cosmological expansion; any 4-velocity of emitter and receiver.
my_wan said:
When it is said that acceleration breaks the symmetry in the so called clock paradox its character differs somewhat between gravitational and inertial boost cases (SR). The key is that the total energy of the system, wrt any observer, must be conserved, and the the lowest sum of the potential energy states correspond to the slowest relative sum of clock rates. The clock paradox is constructed from the fact that each observer assigns all kinetic energy the the other, i.e., disagrees on the localization of the energy of the system. This localization problem has lead some to claim energy is not conserved in GR, but this is no more true than in the SR case.
This is quite wrong. As I mentioned above, in dynamic GR solutions you cannot even define potential. Conservation of energy applies only globally - at spatial infinity, and only if the the global solution is asymptotically flat (or some slight generalization thereof). Where there is no spatial infinity, you cannot define ADM energy, and there is no global conservation.
my_wan said:
In the GR case acceleration between two observers can occur even when both observers effectively remain inertial.
Here you must be careful about coordinate dependent versus invariant quantities. All inertial observers have zero proper acceleration in GR, by definition. Coordinate acceleration between them can basically be made almost whatever you want. You could give this statement some meaning by defining some observation, e.g. : it is true that two inertial observers can see time varying Doppler between each other.
my_wan said:
Hence, unlike the SR cases, tidal forces (g forces) are not strictly required in order for acceleration to occur.
This is very misleading terminology. In GR (and Newtonian gravity too!), tidal forces refer to the tendency of free falling bodies initially at mutual rest to converge or diverge. Meanwhile, GR universally defines 'g forces' if you will to be proper acceleration, which is neither a question of potential (where it can be defined), nor tidal forces. It is simply a measure of deviation from free fall.
my_wan said:
Yet this can only happen if a gravitational field exist, regardless of how different various observers may define it. Changing your location wrt a gravitational field involves changing the ratio of kinetic to potential energy wrt some observer, which is a more general definition of what a boost consist of in SR. Hence the symmetries involved with an acceleration can either involve changing an observers boost in spacetime, or changing the gravitational depth of spacetime itself. The symmetries work exactly the same, even if the manner in which an observer defines the situation differs significantly.
It seems to me that quiet often people attempt to conserve an observer definition of the situation. Technically possible, but worthless in general. However, if you limit the definition of acceleration to strictly non-inertial observers, such that two inertial observers cannot accelerate wrt each other, GR provides very real situations under which any observer definition of the situation can be falsified. Most directly in cases where two inertial observers accelerate wrt each other.
More confusion from mixing coordinate quantities (acceleration without any definition; best I can see is coordinate acceleration) with invariant quantities (proper acceleration, which is certainly zero for any inertial observer in GR).
All in all, your long post did not address the OP scenario at all, and added much confusion and many erroneous statements.