- #36
PAllen
Science Advisor
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Wade888 said:But your explanation results in a required change of the laws of physics, in order to remain consistent with a synchronized experiment on the opposite side of the Earth, since the Earth cannot be moving in both directions simultaneously.
If the explanation does not work for the synchronized experiment, then it can't be valid for either individual half, else you'd be changing the laws of physics based on what? A change in half of the experiment? That doesn't make sense either.
If I have a twin on the opposite side of the planet simultaneously do the same thing as me, drop the ball, the Earth cannot be moving in both directions simultaneously.
We can enforce simultaneity by using equally long electrical cords for signaling, and assuming both of us have flawless reaction time (or by having a computerized arm drop the ball, if you like). Experiments involving distant clocks requiring simultaneity have already been done for determining the properties of Neutrinos (speed is the property in question,) for example, so I know the respected experimentalists in the scientific community already use the same concepts I'm talking about, otherwise the experiment they did wouldn't even make sense.
It is you who is creating a contradiction by perpetually ignoring the information you've been given that the equivalence principle is local. This in no way means it is impossible to set up consistent spacetime coordinates throughout the solar system and beyond. It just means that that the equivalence principle can only be applied in small regions of space and short times such that tidal gravity can be ignored.
The global generalization of the equivalence principle is that free fall is defined by geodesics of the overall geometry - as shown by AT's links, which you show no signs of having attempted to understand. So balls on opposite sides of the Earth are each following inertial, geodesic, maximally straight paths in spacetime. Global geometry has the feature that these geodesics converge. The surface of the Earth and you standing on it are following non-geodesic paths; proper acceleration is a measure of the deviation from geodesic paths. These non-geodesic paths (that exist as paths of objects only by virtue of EM forces of atoms and molecules) cause your foot to accelerate (there is no relativity here - acceleration is locally measurable and absolute = invariant).