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It is well understood that increasing the verlocity of a body to near c leads to i an increase in its apparent mass also that if two bodies start out a being the same age and one is accelerated to near c when it returns it is apparently younger.this leads to the question how much energy must be expended to make a mass of 1Kg one second younger ?
So for instance, I can put two 1kg clocks on either end of a 10m stick that pivots in the middle and re-orient the whole thing (negligible energy required if it's balanced) so one clock is 10m above the other. Wait a while (a long while) and the clocks will be 1 second out of sync. Easy.
Am I right in thinking that , if you did this near the surface of a neutron star you would get a much bigger rate of change between the clocks- so the rate of divergence of the clocks is not a well defined function of energy or time?
so I don't see how it would not be a function of time