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by pdonis
818 days ago
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> I’m genuinely curious how that acceleration meter would work. Look up how the one in your phone works. It reads nonzero when you are standing on Earth because of electromagnetic repulsion between your atoms and the atoms in the floor. > There won’t be any internal forces Yes, there will, because the object's internal state (including its shape, size, and internal stresses) when it is accelerated is different from its shape when it is in free fall. Why? Because the acceleration sets up internal forces in the object that result in a different equilibrium from the one it was in while it was freely falling. |
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It works because there's an external force pushing on the surface of the phone, and not equally on all its parts, which is the scenario we are discussing.
> Because the acceleration sets up internal forces in the object that result in a different equilibrium from the one it was in while it was freely falling.
And the cause of this is what you fail to explain.