ChapelHillSooner
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First, I am having deju vu a bit so if I already discussed this recently then, well, I am getting older so forgive me. (In seriousness I asked this on reddit recently so not sure if I also asked it here.)
My question isn't about general relativity itself but about the motivation to come up with it. My understanding is that one motivation is that Einstein wanted to bring gravity in line with special relativity. I'm getting way over my skis but one problem is that changes in gravitational fields would be immediately apparent everywhere. Ok, so, I get that.
Where I have a problem is when people claim that a motivating factor is that we always feel an acceleration (or instruments can detect it) but we don't feel acceleration caused by gravity when in orbit or free fall.
But looking back at Newtonian physics, we understand that every single particle is accelerated at the same rate. If every particle in my body is experiencing the exact same acceleration, then it seems obvious that we could not feel that acceleration. It is clearly a different situation than being accelerated in a car where the seat is pushing only on the surface of your back and those forces/accelerations have to work their way through your body.
The analogy would be if I were using a spring to detect acceleration, if the force is applied to one end of the spring then that would be noticeable but if it were applied to every single particle within the spring (and the acceleration is identical for every particle) then the spring would not be compressed.
So my argument is that from a physicist in the 1800's, I see no contradiction in saying that I can't feel/detect gravity.
Now, the question is why does gravity accelerate every particle at the same rate. That is because of the dual nature of mass. It both resists changes in momentum and causes the force of gravity. Put those together and mass/gravity is somewhat unique.
One could ask, why does mass play this dual role and why does it have this dual role in just the perfect way to make it impossible to detect whether or not you are being accelerated by gravity? And that is a valid question. But to me, that question is the starting point, not that we must always "feel" acceleration.
I admit that that may be a distinction without a difference but it actually made it harder for me (as someone who never studied general relativity) to understand it.
My question isn't about general relativity itself but about the motivation to come up with it. My understanding is that one motivation is that Einstein wanted to bring gravity in line with special relativity. I'm getting way over my skis but one problem is that changes in gravitational fields would be immediately apparent everywhere. Ok, so, I get that.
Where I have a problem is when people claim that a motivating factor is that we always feel an acceleration (or instruments can detect it) but we don't feel acceleration caused by gravity when in orbit or free fall.
But looking back at Newtonian physics, we understand that every single particle is accelerated at the same rate. If every particle in my body is experiencing the exact same acceleration, then it seems obvious that we could not feel that acceleration. It is clearly a different situation than being accelerated in a car where the seat is pushing only on the surface of your back and those forces/accelerations have to work their way through your body.
The analogy would be if I were using a spring to detect acceleration, if the force is applied to one end of the spring then that would be noticeable but if it were applied to every single particle within the spring (and the acceleration is identical for every particle) then the spring would not be compressed.
So my argument is that from a physicist in the 1800's, I see no contradiction in saying that I can't feel/detect gravity.
Now, the question is why does gravity accelerate every particle at the same rate. That is because of the dual nature of mass. It both resists changes in momentum and causes the force of gravity. Put those together and mass/gravity is somewhat unique.
One could ask, why does mass play this dual role and why does it have this dual role in just the perfect way to make it impossible to detect whether or not you are being accelerated by gravity? And that is a valid question. But to me, that question is the starting point, not that we must always "feel" acceleration.
I admit that that may be a distinction without a difference but it actually made it harder for me (as someone who never studied general relativity) to understand it.