- #71
yuiop
- 3,962
- 20
Passionflower said:I just tested this and while the numbers are very close they are not exactly right!
For instance for:
[tex]\alpha = 1 [/tex]
[tex]h_0= 1/0.1 [/tex]
[tex]h_A= 1/0.3 [/tex]
[tex]h_B= 1/0.2 [/tex]
[tex]\tau_{h_0} = 1 [/tex]
We get:
[tex]\alpha_A = 0.83333 [/tex]
[tex]\tau_A = 0.83333 [/tex]
[tex]\alpha_B = 0.90909 [/tex]
[tex]\tau_B = 0.90909 [/tex]
[tex]d_{ABA} = 0.20833 [/tex]
[tex]d_{BAB} = 0.19091[/tex]
Then if we take:
[tex]d_{BAB} * \frac{\alpha_B}{\alpha_A}[/tex]
We get: 0.20826
However, as I suspected a little bit, if we do the same calculation in a homogeneous gravitational field your adjustment seems to work. I think this is due to the fact the the roundtrip time between A and B from A plus the roundtrip time between A and B from B is always double the inertial roundtrip time in a homogeneous gravitational field.
In Born rigid linear acceleration the proper acceleration is proportional to the inverse of the distance (your h I assume) from the pivot point. This distance h is measured in the momentarily Co-Moving Inertial Reference Frame. When the clocks are synchronised the way I specified, the clocks are no longer regularly spaced at constant intervals apart in the CMIRF. You are using constant intervals of 0.1 between h0, hA and hC, and I think that is why you are not getting the correct numbers.