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GregAshmore
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Here is Max Born explaining the crash of a train, in which the train is regarded to be at rest:
There are two peculiar features of this gravitational field:
1. Causation. The field appears coincidentally with the collision of the train with an obstacle. If a passenger had pulled the emergency cord, a somewhat weaker field would have been generated. The field disappears in an even more remarkable manner, becoming weaker as each piece of wreckage comes to rest. It is difficult to imagine physical connections between these causes and events.
2. Propagation. The field appears everywhere in the universe at the same instant. If instantaneous force of gravity at a distance is a weakness of Newton's theory, then instantaneous acceleration of gravity at a distance must be a weakness of Einstein's theory.
With this in mind, it seems to me that the "resting train" view of the event is not as "real" as the "resting earth" view.
Comments?
We may choose a coordinate system rigidly attached to the train, in which case, at the moment of collision, the whole world makes a jerk relative to this system; everywhere we get a very strong gravitational field parallel to the original motion and this field causes the destruction of the train. Why does the church tower in the neighboring village not tumble down, too? ... The answer is this: the church tower does not fall down because, during the retardation, its relative position to the distant cosmic masses is not changed at all. The jerk, which as seen from the train, the whole world experiences, affects all bodies equally from the most distant stars to the church tower. All these bodies fall freely in the gravitational field which is present during the retardation.
There are two peculiar features of this gravitational field:
1. Causation. The field appears coincidentally with the collision of the train with an obstacle. If a passenger had pulled the emergency cord, a somewhat weaker field would have been generated. The field disappears in an even more remarkable manner, becoming weaker as each piece of wreckage comes to rest. It is difficult to imagine physical connections between these causes and events.
2. Propagation. The field appears everywhere in the universe at the same instant. If instantaneous force of gravity at a distance is a weakness of Newton's theory, then instantaneous acceleration of gravity at a distance must be a weakness of Einstein's theory.
With this in mind, it seems to me that the "resting train" view of the event is not as "real" as the "resting earth" view.
Comments?