Jarle said:
You are saying that acceleration and a constant velocity is not the same,
Ofcourse it's NOT the same.
and I assume it is because in acceleration you experience G force.
Huh ? So, you conclude from this that acceleration and constant velocity are the same ? Explain, please.
The thing that doesn't say click in my head then, is gravity.
What do you mean by that ?
An object could be in parallell acceleration in outspace with an object on earth,
1) What's parallel acceleration
2) What's "outspace"
with the object in space moving by inertial force,
With respect to what frame of reference ? Without defining that, you cannot be speaking about "inertial forces".
and the object on Earth moving because of the gravity.
Now THAT is an inertial frame.
The difference is that the object on Earth DOES NOT feel G powers,
You mean g force, right ? The ratio of acceleration to gravitational acceleration. Or the force to weight ratio. 6 G's means that the force on an object is 6 times it's weight.
it is like it is just standing still(standing still=constant velocity, I may have explained myself a bit wrong here), even though it is accelerating.
1) standing still is NOT the same as having constant velocity.
2) standing still eventhough it is accelerating ? What the ... ? With respect to what reference frames are you talking here ?
I thought since the object on Earth accelerationg is not feeling any G's
Nonsense, check the definition of G-force again.
they can't be "moving" in a 3 dimensional space, but in a 4 dimensional space, yes. If a object moved upwards in a 2 dimensional space it would be standing still in the observers eyes. If it moved upwards in a three dimensional spave it WOULD move in the observers eyes too.
Jarle, this is just rubbish. Pardon the French but do YOU even know what you are saying here ?
Look, if you want to have a constructive debate here you need to change your attitude and the way you present your questions. Try to answer my questions as a start. They will make this topic a whole lot clearer. If you talk about inertial forces you ALWAYS need to specify the frame of reference. Be more accurate with that. Refrain from using ill concieved concepts like "outspace", "parallel acceleration" and constant velocity with acceleration. THINK ABOUT WHAT YOU ARE WRITING DOWN.
Also Jarle, i am sure that you have read the PF Guidelines. They clearly state how you should present your questions on this forum. The way you are doing it right now is a big NONO. Please, put in some extra effort, we will be patient enough with you but we need to see progress on that. If not, actions WILL be taken. So, take this as constructive criticism and learn from it.
regards
marlon