Understanding acceleration problem

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When one object accelerates away from another, only the object undergoing acceleration feels the force due to inertia, while the other does not experience this "push." The discussion highlights that velocities are relative, but accelerations are absolute, meaning that only one object can be truly accelerating at a time. The example of Earth and the sun illustrates that while both can be perceived as moving relative to each other, only the Earth feels the force of its acceleration. The concept of inertia is crucial in understanding why acceleration is felt, and this may relate to future discoveries about the Higgs field. The conversation also touches on the idea of continuous inertial frames, suggesting a complex relationship between acceleration and reference points.
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When one object accelerates away from another object, relativly they are both accelerating away from each other. The second object's speed is changing relative to the object truly changing it's speed. However the second object does not feel the "push" from the acceleration.

I am having trouble understanding why only one object is truly accelerating and feels the "push" or force of acceleration. It is intuitive that only you would feel the force as you accelerated away from someone else, however I don't understand why.

Another example is that the Earth is rotating around the sun, however you could say that the sun and everything else is rotating around the earth, if you kept the Earth centered. Though the sun does not feel the acceleration, the Earth is truly the object changing its velocity direction and feels the acceleration force, but what determines this..?
 
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DeepSeeded said:
When one object accelerates away from another object, relativly they are both accelerating away from each other.
That statement is false. Velocities are relative, accelerations (and angular velocities) are not relative.

Also, your mention of gravity is a bad example (since gravity is not a force, and what you probably thought of as gravitational acceleration is better conceptualised as the absence of acceleration to resist the curvature of spacetime).
 


If you watched one object accelerate away from another with no backround depending on what object you focused on either object would apear to be accelerating.
 


DeepSeeded : The object that undergoes the acceleration relative to an independent observer if a light source exists on both the object that is accelearting and the object that is not accelerating, will allow the two objects to determine which has undergone an energy change due to the acceleration, by the independent observer.
The reason the acceleration is felt, is due to inertia. Inertia may soon be understood, if the Higgs field boson, that mediates mass is reveled in the LHC.
 
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DeepSeeded said:
with no backround [..] either object would apear to be accelerating.

That relates to Mach's principle (an unanswered and still debated question in theoretical physics), suffice here to say that in practice there is always background constellations.
 


That is a good point about the doppler shift. About only one changing in energy. If you pointed a doppler gun at both objects only one would return a shift. That helps thanks.
 


I think that it depends about your reference which shall has v = 0
 


How about this..

Can acceleration be thought of as a continuous infinite number of inertial frames, each frame having an infinitsmal change in velocity?
 
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