- #1
Wes Tausend
Gold Member
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This thread is an offshoot from post #55 on a previous thread called, "Freefall isn't acceleration?".
A.T.,
From good reference, I'm not so sure "constant radius" is that easy to pin down. We may take it upon ourselves to assume that there is no surface movement, no "spatial inflation" change in the general space between and within the atoms comprising earth, but how do we know that for a fact? Afterall, here on PF, students and members alike can expect extraordinary claims to require extraordinary proof. Around 1898, the great mathematician, Poincaré, explored this very principle in his publication, The Relativity of Space, which we may find useful today.
Below, consider the following excerpt from Poincaré's The Relativity of Space in his Science & Method essays:
Part of it reads:
"...Suppose that in one night all the dimensions of the universe became a thousand times larger. The world will remain similar to itself, if we give the word similitude the meaning it has in the third book of Euclid. Only, what was formerly a metre long will now measure a kilometre, and what was a millimetre long will become a metre. The bed in which I went to sleep and my body itself will have grown in the same proportion. When I awake in the morning what will be my feeling in face of such an astonishing transformation? Well, I shall not notice anything at all. The most exact measures will be incapable of revealing anything of this tremendous change, since the yard-measures I shall use will have varied in exactly the same proportions as the objects I shall attempt to measure. In reality the change only exists for those who argue as if space were absolute..."
From the above, we can logically surmise that Poincaré's "recreational" observation of human cluelessness seems to ring true, if the "jerk of such an abrupt change" did not awaken one (which he left unsaid). Accordingly, even the Earth's "new" radius would apparently not yield a clue. That concludes part 1.
Following, in part 2, we can reason our own additional observation:
Our own observation might be the one Poincaré also left unsaid... that perhaps we could not easily detect such an obscure growing dimension even if it were somehow ongoing... as long as a steady growth occurred at uniform motion. Such uniform motion is the same smooth motions of Earth traveling around the sun and rotating every 24 hours, none of which are easily noticeable in spite of both occurances together, being a rather complicated combination in the minds eye. The complications of uniform motion have temporarily fooled humans before in geocentricity vs heliocentricity and due care has since been heralded.
But more ominous, further suppose the proposed "growth" of this "fantasy" motion were not uniform? What if the motion were steadily speeding up (accelerating) as it occurred? In that case, we may surmise all living inhabitants of Earth would perhaps merely now notice, only an acceleration. Depending on rate, we must reluctantly admit, this "rising ground" phenomena might feel exactly like Einstein's (or even Newton's) gravity. It seems absolutely everything else, the entire universe, would appear exactly the same.
As per Feynman, we can be fooled, but nature cannot. So are we fooled in this case? No, but only because of SR which hadn't been invented in 1898.
As far as I can see, the sole basic item preventing this particular scenario from becoming a legitimate general relative coordinate system is the limiting speed of light which must naturally be included. Matter simply cannot accelerate faster and faster indefinately, and that seems to settle it.
Does anyone else have some other more simple form of basic proof? Agree, disagree?
Wes
...
This thread is an offshoot from post #55 on a previous thread called, "Freefall isn't acceleration?".
A.T. said:The movement of a piece of surface is frame dependent, but the surface definitely doesn't move outward as a whole because the radius is constant. The frame invariant proper acceleration of the surface doesn't imply movement.Wes Tausend said:In a nutshell, Equivalence principle. The earth, consisting of matter as cause, acts just as though it's surface is moving upward, or at least outward in an accelerated manner. The floor rises to meet "falling" objects.
A.T.,
From good reference, I'm not so sure "constant radius" is that easy to pin down. We may take it upon ourselves to assume that there is no surface movement, no "spatial inflation" change in the general space between and within the atoms comprising earth, but how do we know that for a fact? Afterall, here on PF, students and members alike can expect extraordinary claims to require extraordinary proof. Around 1898, the great mathematician, Poincaré, explored this very principle in his publication, The Relativity of Space, which we may find useful today.
Below, consider the following excerpt from Poincaré's The Relativity of Space in his Science & Method essays:
Part of it reads:
"...Suppose that in one night all the dimensions of the universe became a thousand times larger. The world will remain similar to itself, if we give the word similitude the meaning it has in the third book of Euclid. Only, what was formerly a metre long will now measure a kilometre, and what was a millimetre long will become a metre. The bed in which I went to sleep and my body itself will have grown in the same proportion. When I awake in the morning what will be my feeling in face of such an astonishing transformation? Well, I shall not notice anything at all. The most exact measures will be incapable of revealing anything of this tremendous change, since the yard-measures I shall use will have varied in exactly the same proportions as the objects I shall attempt to measure. In reality the change only exists for those who argue as if space were absolute..."
From the above, we can logically surmise that Poincaré's "recreational" observation of human cluelessness seems to ring true, if the "jerk of such an abrupt change" did not awaken one (which he left unsaid). Accordingly, even the Earth's "new" radius would apparently not yield a clue. That concludes part 1.
Following, in part 2, we can reason our own additional observation:
Our own observation might be the one Poincaré also left unsaid... that perhaps we could not easily detect such an obscure growing dimension even if it were somehow ongoing... as long as a steady growth occurred at uniform motion. Such uniform motion is the same smooth motions of Earth traveling around the sun and rotating every 24 hours, none of which are easily noticeable in spite of both occurances together, being a rather complicated combination in the minds eye. The complications of uniform motion have temporarily fooled humans before in geocentricity vs heliocentricity and due care has since been heralded.
But more ominous, further suppose the proposed "growth" of this "fantasy" motion were not uniform? What if the motion were steadily speeding up (accelerating) as it occurred? In that case, we may surmise all living inhabitants of Earth would perhaps merely now notice, only an acceleration. Depending on rate, we must reluctantly admit, this "rising ground" phenomena might feel exactly like Einstein's (or even Newton's) gravity. It seems absolutely everything else, the entire universe, would appear exactly the same.
As per Feynman, we can be fooled, but nature cannot. So are we fooled in this case? No, but only because of SR which hadn't been invented in 1898.
As far as I can see, the sole basic item preventing this particular scenario from becoming a legitimate general relative coordinate system is the limiting speed of light which must naturally be included. Matter simply cannot accelerate faster and faster indefinately, and that seems to settle it.
Does anyone else have some other more simple form of basic proof? Agree, disagree?
Wes
...