sweet springs said:
I have questions.
I suppose
g(x)=-\frac{c^2}{x}
where x is distance from Event Horizon which is at backward of rocket and is shared by every part of the rocket. Gravity potential is by integrating this,
\phi(x)=c^2 log\frac{x}{x_0}+\phi_0
Any proper acceleration systems of different acceleration values are the same one. Their distance from E.H. ,x, make apparent difference i.e. values of proper acceleration.
Do these make sense?
I have to think about the significance of the potential that you are deriving. Normally, the significance of a potential is that the combination of kinetic energy plus potential is constant for an object dropped into that potential. Right off the bat, I don't see how that comes into play.
A freely falling object in the accelerated ##R, \theta## coordinate system will satisfy two conservation equations:
- ##\frac{1}{2} m (\frac{dR}{d\tau})^2 - \frac{1}{2} m R^2 (\frac{d\theta}{d\tau})^2 = -\frac{1}{2} m c^2##
- ##R^2 \frac{d\theta}{d\tau} = \mathcal{E}##
where ##\tau## is proper time for the object. The first equation is really just the equation ##\frac{d\tau}{dt} = \sqrt{1 - \frac{1}{c^2}(\frac{dx}{dt})^2}## squared and multiplied by ##\frac{1}{2} mc^2## to look more like a Newtonian conservation of energy equation. The second is a consequence of the fact that the "gravitational potential" is independent of the coordinate ##\theta##. ##\mathcal{E}## is an arbitrary constant. If we assume that the object is dropped from "rest" at position ##R_0##, then the relationship between ##\theta## and ##\tau## is initially: ##\theta = \frac{c \tau}{R_0}##, so ##\frac{d\theta}{d\tau} = \frac{c}{R_0}##. So the constant ##\mathcal{E}## is just ##c R_0##. So the constant ##\mathcal{E}## turns out to be ##c R_0##.
We can stick the second into the first to get a new conservation equation:
##\frac{1}{2} m (\frac{dR}{d\tau})^2 - \frac{1}{2} m c^2 \frac{(R_0)^2}{R^2} = -\frac{1}{2} m c^2##
This is an exact equation,
So in terms of ##\tau##, the path of a freefalling object seems more like an inverse-square potential, instead of a logarithmic potential.
I don't immediately see how the potential you derive can be understood in terms of the accelerated coordinate system. Maybe I need to look at the nonrelativistic limit of the exact equation. I'll have to think about it more.