- #1
inertiaforce
- 60
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According to this video, freefall isn't accelerated motion and is actually stationary. In other words, you aren't moving in freefall:
inertiaforce said:According to this video, freefall isn't accelerated motion and is actually stationary. In other words, you aren't moving in freefall
Orodruin said:No, this is the wrong interpretation. You are not accelerating in free fall. (We are here talking about what is called proper acceleration, which is what an accelerometer measures.) Movement is relative.
jedishrfu said:When you free fall you are in an inertial frame of reference.
Consider the Vomit Comet where the plane is in fretful for a few seconds. Inside you feel weight-less and move around without any feeling of gravity. If you kick off from the wall you will travel at constant velocity toward the other wall.
Orodruin said:All it means is that you need proper acceleration to remain stationary.
What is the point of this post? Do you understand what stationary and proper acceleration means?inertiaforce said:Lol. "You need proper acceleration to remain stationary." I'm sure that's going to go over well with the general public...
Orodruin said:What is the point of this post? Do you understand what stationary and proper acceleration means?
Orodruin said:What is the point of this post? Do you understand what stationary and proper acceleration means?
inertiaforce said:But I have come to realize that free fall is not an accelerated frame of reference. Prior to today, I was always told that freefall was an accelerated frame of reference. It is only today that I started to realize that freefall is not an accelerated frame of reference. It is an inertial (nonaccelerated) frame of reference because there are no net forces acting on a person in freefall. Therefore, it is not an accelerated frame of reference. This is so nonintuitive for the layperson. It has taken me a lot of research on my own just to come to this understanding. Is this understanding correct?
Like almost everything else in relativity, acceleration is relative. Proper acceleration means "acceleration relative to a freefalling object that you are momentarily at rest with". Practically, it is acceleration as measured by an accelerometer. Other "non-proper" sorts of accleration are possible, usually referred to as "coordinate acceleration", which depends which coordinates you choose to use.inertiaforce said:I am not familiar with the term "proper acceleration." Please educate me.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proper_accelerationinertiaforce said:I am not familiar with the term "proper acceleration."
Strictly speaking, free-fall is an inertial frame of reference locally only. This distinction becomes important when we're talking about frames in regions of space close to a massive object.inertiaforce said:It is only today that I started to realize that freefall is not an accelerated frame of reference. It is an inertial (nonaccelerated) frame of reference
inertiaforce said:According to this video, freefall isn't accelerated motion and is actually stationary. In other words, you aren't moving in freefall:
You are trying to take a global view, which is not as straightforward as it seems in GR. The ground has a proper acceleration of ca 10 m/s^2. This does not mean that it is not stationary. The Earth is (essentially) stationary as well. The apple is not stationary, but at rest in a local inertial frame.bahamagreen said:One might wonder that if it were the Earth that accelerates to the apple at rest, the apple must observe that the whole universe must instantaneously and universally accelerate at 10m/S^2 wrt the resting apple in the apple's "up" direction for the duration of the Earth's fall, and this acceleration of the whole universe will stop suddenly, instantaneously, and universally when the Earth is stopped when it contacts the apple.
bahamagreen said:Video starts off without even pausing to think about anything, continues without follow-up or follow-through, just steady non-stop hipster blather like a cleaning product sales pitch.
So hip that it's simply wrong:bahamagreen said:Video starts off without even pausing to think about anything, continues without follow-up or follow-through, just steady non-stop hipster blather like a cleaning product sales pitch.
Regretfully Einstein's original GR did correspond to somewhat similar views, see:One might wonder that if it were the Earth that accelerates to the apple at rest, the apple must observe that the whole universe must instantaneously and universally accelerate at 10m/S^2 wrt the resting apple in the apple's "up" direction for the duration of the Earth's fall, and this acceleration of the whole universe will stop suddenly, instantaneously, and universally when the Earth is stopped when it contacts the apple.
How did the distant regions of the universe conspire to coordinate their differential sudden onset of acceleration and subsequent cessation of motion over billions of years in order to appear to be instantaneous and universal to the apple just when the stem that held the Earth broke? [..]
Non inertial frames are like that even in classical mechanics. And in GR inertial frames exist only locally, over regions where effects of tidal gravity are negligible. So even though the apple is inertial, you cannot extend it's inertial rest frame to infinity or even to a substantial fraction of the planet's size.bahamagreen said:One might wonder that if it were the Earth that accelerates to the apple at rest, the apple must observe that the whole universe must instantaneously and universally accelerate at 10m/S^2 wrt the resting apple...
Yes indeed, #37A.T. said:Similar issues discussed here:
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/einstein-says-objects-do-not-fall-to-the-earth.781200/
harrylin said:So hip that it's simply wrong:
"according to Einstein there is no such thing as a gravitational force, instead it's more appropriate to think of the apple as stationary and the ground [..] as accelerating upward"" - video (emphasis mine)
"The general theory of relativity renders it likely that the electrical masses of an electron are held together by gravitational forces."
"I must warn the reader against a misconception [..] we might easily suppose that the existence of a gravitational field is always only an apparent one. [..] This is by no means true for all gravitational fields, but only for those of quite special form. It is, for instance, impossible to choose a body of reference such that, as judged from it, the gravitational field of the Earth (in its entirety) vanishes - Einstein 1916, Relativity: The Special and General Theory (emphasis mine)
Yes it is simply wrong to pretend what is not true. And the video claims that according to Einstein it is more appropriate to think of the apple as stationary and the ground as accelerating upward", which is also wrong and effectively propagating the misconception that Einstein warned for. Einstein's explanation implies that one may equally well hold that the apple is stationary and the Earth accelerating upward, so that only locally the gravitational field vanishes.stevendaryl said:It is not "simply wrong". Einstein was speaking loosely about "gravitational forces". Strictly speaking, there are no such things in GR.
In terms of frame invariant proper acceleration that is true. One just shouldn't conflate the frame invariant proper acceleration (or lack of it) with frame dependent properties like moving (or being stationary).harrylin said:...video pretends that according to Einstein it is more appropriate to interpret it as the ground accelerating upward!
Apparently the video doesn't pretend to present proper acceleration there. And I had overlooked the title "Is gravity an illusion?". No, GR is not a theory about an illusion!A.T. said:In terms of frame invariant proper acceleration that is true. One just shouldn't conflate the frame invariant proper acceleration (or lack of it) with frame dependent properties like moving (or being stationary).
harrylin said:Yes it is simply wrong to pretend what is not true. And the video claims that according to Einstein it is more appropriate to think of the apple as stationary and the ground as accelerating upward", which is also wrong and effectively propagating the misconception that Einstein warned for. Einstein's explanation implies that one may equally well hold that the apple is stationary and the Earth accelerating upward, so that only locally the gravitational field vanishes.
Thus Einstein claimed that "The Earth produces in its surrounding a gravitational field, which acts on the stone and produces its motion of fall" while this video pretends that according to Einstein it is more appropriate to interpret it as the ground accelerating upward!
harrylin said:Apparently the video doesn't pretend to present proper acceleration there.
harrylin said:Apparently the video doesn't pretend to present proper acceleration there. And I had overlooked the title "Is gravity an illusion?". No, GR is not a theory about an illusion!
Acceleration relative to an inertial frame is commonly defined by means of a to the inertial frame attached coordinate system as d2s/dt2. At least, that's what textbooks teach and how most ordinary people understand it. However, that is irrelevant as at that point no mention at all is made of inertial frames; just a comparison between what Newton allegedly said and what Einstein allegedly said about the same phenomenon. For sure Newton was speaking of coordinate acceleration, and logically this is also how at least 90% of the intended viewers will interpret the comparison in the introduction between "accelerating down"(Newton) and "accelerating up" (Einstein).stevendaryl said:It certainly does talk about proper acceleration, when it talks about acceleration relative to an inertial frame. That's what proper acceleration is.
Perhaps you mean, it depends on what the video calls "gravity", or what most people understand by that word (that emission was obviously aiming at the general public). Compare https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitystevendaryl said:It depends on what you're calling "gravity".
stevendaryl said:[..] Saying "the Earth produces a gravitational field, which acts of the stone" is Newtonian gravity. [..]
Sorry, but to me it really sounds as if you saying here that according Einstein the Earth does not produce in its surrounding a gravitational field, which acts on the stone and produces its motion of fall.[..] Newtonian physics characterized gravity by the acceleration of a particle under its influence. Newton's law of gravity related that quantity (or its divergence, actually) to mass density. Einstein knew, from the equivalence principle, that that was the wrong way to characterize gravity [..] There is an apparent force of gravity aboard an accelerating train, and that is certainly not due to the attraction between different hunks of matter.
I'm sorry to hear that you misunderstood my agreement with bahamagreen as a complaint; my criticism on the video has nothing to do with complaining. I do wonder why you are so keen on defending wrong information which I exposed. Even more, I'm puzzled why you would think that according to me that video should reassure the nervous that much is the same as with Newtonian gravity; why would you think such a thing??[...]
This video is about what makes GR different than Newtonian gravity, and you keep complaining that it doesn't reassure the nervous that much is the same as with Newtonian gravity.
That's fine of course; I clarified a misconception that the video seems to promote and against which Einstein warned.Yes, there is a lot that is the same, and with gravity in mild conditions such as near the Earth, GR can be thought of as a tweak on Newtonian gravity. But if you're trying to learn GR, you want to know what's different about it.
Yes of course; a misleading title and introduction do not mean that all the information in the video is wrong.You say that the presentation in this video is somehow contrary to Einstein, but it is thought experiments such as those described in this video that inspired Einstein's theory. [..]
harrylin said:Acceleration relative to an inertial frame is commonly defined by means of a to the inertial frame attached coordinate system as d2s/dt2. At least, that's what textbooks teach and how most ordinary people understand it. However, that is irrelevant as at that point no mention at all is made of inertial frames
In other words, you aren't moving in freefall: ... is not necessarily always correct, but it could be in some instances. It would be more proper to say, "You (or an object) cannot ever feel any motion whatsoever in free-fall:"inertiaforce said:According to this video, freefall isn't accelerated motion and is actually stationary. In other words, you aren't moving in freefall:
From 1:35 on he explains how to determine if a frame undergoes proper acceleration.harrylin said:Apparently the video doesn't pretend to present proper acceleration there.
Would an accelerometer measures a non-zero acceleration aboard the ISS?Orodruin said:No, this is the wrong interpretation. You are not accelerating in free fall. (We are here talking about what is called proper acceleration, which is what an accelerometer measures.) Movement is relative.