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by gwd
819 days ago
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But the acceleration meter won't measure any force because gravity is acting on every part of it uniformly. If you had an acceleration meter entirely made out of the same magnetic substance, and you brought a magnet near it, would the acceleration meter register anything, or would it read zero acceleration, since all parts of it were being acted on uniformly (and thus didn't "notice" any acceleration)? |
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No. The acceleration meter won't measure anything because there is nothing to measure. An object in free fall is in free fall; there is no "gravity" acting on it at all. It's just as if the object were floating out in deep space, far from all gravitating bodies. That's the point of the equivalence principle.
> If you had an acceleration meter entirely made out of the same magnetic substance, and you brought a magnet near it, would the acceleration meter register anything
Yes. Electromagnetism, weak, and strong interactions all make the acceleration meter register nonzero, even if the act "equally" on all parts of an object.