The cables break and the elevator goes into free fall.
Newton told us that the elevator accelerates and, therefore, there is a force that makes it accelerate.
Then Einstein came along and told us that this is not true and that
there is no force that accelerates the elevator in free fall.
But if there is no force that accelerates the elevator, it means that
the elevator does not accelerate.
And if it does not accelerate, then it moves with uniform speed.
But speed is not absolute: it is relative.
And so I ask: is there any reference system with respect to which its
speed is uniform?
...
Now let's look at the same system from a GR perspective, i.e., from a perspective that gravity isn't a force, but rather a manifestation of spacetime curvature. In this perspective it's most natural to measure accelerations relative to *free-fall*, or more precisely with respect
to a *freely-falling local inertial reference frame* (FFLIRF). An
FFLIRF is just a Newtonian IRF in which a fixed coordinate position
(e.g., x=y=z=0) is freely falling.
Jonathan Thornburg [remove -color to reply] il 21/12/2024 09:27:44 ha scritto:
...
Now let's look at the same system from a GR perspective, i.e., from a
perspective that gravity isn't a force, but rather a manifestation of
spacetime curvature. In this perspective it's most natural to measure
accelerations relative to *free-fall*, or more precisely with respect
to a *freely-falling local inertial reference frame* (FFLIRF). An
FFLIRF is just a Newtonian IRF in which a fixed coordinate position
(e.g., x=y=z=0) is freely falling.
Can we define the interior space of the elevator as "local" or is it
too big?
If it is too big, how big must it be to be considered "local"?
If it is shown that there are real forces inside the free-falling
elevator, can we still consider this reference system inertial?
Are tidal forces real?
Do we mean by "freely falling bodies" only those that fall in the very
weak gravitational field of the Earth or also those that fall in any
other gravitational field, such as that of Jupiter or a black hole?
Luigi Fortunati.
The cables break and the elevator goes into free fall.
Newton told us that the elevator accelerates and, therefore, there is a
force that makes it accelerate.
Then Einstein came along and told us that this is not true
and that
there is no force that accelerates the elevator in free fall.
But if there is no force that accelerates the elevator, it means that
the elevator does not accelerate.
And if it does not accelerate, then it moves with uniform speed.
But speed is not absolute: it is relative.
And so I ask: is there any reference system with respect to which its
speed is uniform?
This is for Newton's second law: force that accelerates mass.
Instead, for the first law, Einstein says that a body in the elevator
in free fall is at rest with respect to the elevator itself.
So, why does a body placed below the center of gravity of a
free-falling elevator accelerate downwards, and if it is above the
center of gravity, it accelerates upwards?
Can we define the interior space of the elevator as "local" or is it
too big?
If it is shown that there are real forces inside the free-falling
elevator, can we still consider this reference system inertial?
Are tidal forces real?
Do we mean by "freely falling bodies" only those that fall in the very
weak gravitational field of the Earth or also those that fall in any
other gravitational field, such as that of Jupiter or a black hole?
The cables break and the elevator goes into free fall.[[...]]
for the first law, Einstein says that a body in the elevator
in free fall is at rest with respect to the elevator itself.
So, why does a body placed below the center of gravity of a
free-falling elevator accelerate downwards, and if it is above the
center of gravity, it accelerates upwards?
Can we define the interior space of the elevator as "local" or is it
too big?
If it is too big, how big must it be to be considered "local"?
If it is shown that there are real forces inside the free-falling
elevator, can we still consider this reference system inertial?
Are tidal forces real?
Are tidal forces real?
They can do work, so they must be real.
[[...]]
See
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tidal_power
for some real-world examples of work done by tidal forces, with (in some cases) power output measured in the hundreds of megawatts. These systems
all ultimately exploit the fact that g_wrt_Earth is NOT constant from one edge of the tidal power basin to the other edge, i.e., that the (entire) tidal power basin as NOT a local inertial reference frame.
On 12/20/24 12:51 AM, Luigi Fortunati wrote:
The cables break and the elevator goes into free fall.
Newton told us that the elevator accelerates and, therefore, there is a
force that makes it accelerate.
Then Einstein came along and told us that this is not true
This is one of your problems. Physics is not about "true or false"; we
make MODELS of the world we inhabit -- Newtonian mechanics and GR are DIFFERENT MODELS. The problem is that you intermix nomenclature
willy-nilly between them.
[...] *real* gravitational force
So, it is the presence or absence of *real* gravitational forces in
the "local" frame of the elevator that establishes which of the two
models is correct and which is not.
A contestation that I expected and that no one has made is this: if
General Relativity is wrong, why are its results more consistent
with observed phenomena than those of Newton's gravitation?
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