|
|
|
|
|
by jjk166
818 days ago
|
|
But that path curvature of worldlines is in spacetime, the field of gravity. If you chose your worldline along the electromagnetic field instead, you'd see no "proper" acceleration when being pulled by the electromagnetic field and you would see "proper" acceleration due to gravity. And to develop internal stresses, there needs to be some difference in the forces acting upon different parts of the body. Again, you are arbitrarily using free fall as your choice of a default state, against which you are comparing. If you instead chose being stationary on the ground, which would correspond to when you are in electromagnetic free fall, you would register an acceleration when in gravitational free fall. |
|
It's the path curvature of worldlines in spacetime.
> the field of gravity
Only if the spacetime is curved. But worldlines can have path curvature even in flat spacetime.
> If you chose your worldline along the electromagnetic field instead, you'd see no "proper" acceleration when being pulled by the electromagnetic field and you would see "proper" acceleration due to gravity.
There is no such thing as "worldline along the electromagnetic field" as you appear to be using the term. A charged object in an electromagnetic field will have nonzero proper acceleration, as measured by an accelerometer. That's an invariant prediction; there is no alternate model in which it's any different.
> to develop internal stresses, there needs to be some difference in the forces acting upon different parts of the body
No, there doesn't. There just needs to be a difference in the shape and size of the body, from its state when under no external forces.
It is true that, if the body is large enough, the distribution of internal stresses in the body might not be uniform when the body reaches its equilibrium state under some externally applied force. For example, if the object is tall enough, the internal pressure at the top will be measurably less than the internal pressure at the bottom. But this is not due to any difference in external force being applied to the object. It's due to how the object adjusts itself to be in equilibrium under the applied external force.
> If you instead chose being stationary on the ground, which would correspond to when you are in electromagnetic free fall, you would register an acceleration when in gravitational free fall.
Again, this is just wrong. There is neither a valid theoretical model, nor any experimental data, to support this claim.