- #36
pmb_phy
- 2,952
- 1
You can think it but it won't make it true. What I've told you is basic GR. Any GRist will tell you the exact same thing that I've told you.Garth said:I think it is you that is confused!
That is incorrect. You're confused on this point and what Einstein's equivalence principle is. It is now clear to me that this is the exact source of your confusion and why your argument is flawed. You stated thatFree falling means just that in the EEP.
You have specifically chosen a region of spacetime which is too large and now you cannot ignore tidal forces. You can ignore tidal forces if an only if you can ignore acceleration. Your entire argument is based on the acceleration of a particle in free-fall as observered in a free-fall frame. However since you said the kinetic energy is increasing then that statement implies the spacetime is curved and it implies you're not ignoring tidal forces.Over a period of time you notice that its kinetic energy is rapidly increasing as it accelerates towards you, ...
In a curved spacetime Einstein's equivlence principle only says that the gravitational field can be transformed away at only one point in spacetime. That's the EEP as stated by Einstein himself.
I.e. when you transform to a free-fall frame as you have in your example, then the gravitational field has vanished only at one point in your frame of reference - the origin of your coordinate system. At points off the origin there is still a gravitational force. Since you have indicated that the particle you're observering is accelerating then you have not chosen to ignore tidal forces.
I assume that you have Weinberg's text. In chapter 3 please read section section 1 - Statement of the Principle then read section 2 - Gravitational Forces. This time don't skip by when Weinberg states what I've explained to you on page 68 in the third paragraph.
You've chosen not to make your region of space and time small enough to ignroe the gravitational forces and hence you can't claim that the gravitational forces is zero since it hasn't vanished.Although inertial forces don not exactly cancel gravitational forces for freely falling systems in an inhomogeneous or time-dependant gravitational field we can still expect an approximate cancelation if we restrict out attention to such a small region of space and time that the field varies very little over the region.
Nobody knows if energy is conserved globaly. SeeGlobal energy is conserved, ..
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/GR/energy_gr.html