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Yes, that's what I'm wondering too. Pressure and Gravity. You will have a pressure at the middle, that much seems clear but you can't equal that to a 'gravity', can you?
So one could say that in a mathematical sense the steeper the slope the slower the clock?
Ah, in the Jules Vernian sense I mean, measuring time differences. And then we have two different types of 'weightlessness' if this is correct, don't we? Or maybe not? You could compare it to an uniform acceleration giving you a constant gravity?? Nah, that's not being weightless, weightless is a 'free fall' as I understands it? In what way does that 'weightlessness' in the middle have anything to do with a free fall if so?? Awh..
So in what way would I be able to differ the weightlessness inside my black box at the middle of our earth, against being in a free fall? You could argue that pressure will do it, but you can set up a equal situation in a free fall I think, creating that pressure, can't you? Either it will differ or?Consider the definition of gravity as being equal to a uniform accelerating?This one is still strange to me, even though your point of view makes eminent sense Mr fontwell And the idea of equivalence doesn't build on looking at a situation with 'the eye of a God' as I understands it? It builds on the opposite, being in a black box unable to define anything except from your own frame?
The difference is that near a mass everyone agrees clocks run slower than further away. But this does not create a privileged position, just different positions. The clock near the mass still measures local seconds but he measures clocks further away as running as too fast. Who is correct? There is no correct.It is like we look at the clock on a GPS satellite and correct it to our local time. But the Sun affects us both, so the Sun thinks we are both too fast. But the centre of the Galaxy thinks the Sun is too fast. Even our observable universe is perhaps too fast for someone else!
Does this mean there is not a universe standard law of conservation of energy [work heat equivilance] ?
Just to say something on the issue of the zero gravity at the earth's centre versus 1G at the surface. I think the bending of space-time and slowing of clocks is due to mass, not gravity. Gravity is an effect of curved space-time. The centre of the earth is at the bottom of a local curve and so there is no gravity there. However, the actual curve is at its lowest point so the time is most slowed down. I think.
Well, the GR view of gravity is that it is only an effect of curved space-time. The GR view is that mass curves space-time. And the equations for time dilation refer to the centre of mass. The clock at the earth's centre is slowed by the combined pressure of all that mass around it.
I will say again in case the relevance of my previous question was not understood if the equations for time dilation were referring to the centre how is it possible that the time dilation is any different one radius away?, the values should be the same according to the radius squared part of the equation.
Also i don't see how mass applies pressure other than as a consequence of gravity
OK another question, how is time slowest at the center ? Because as i understand it Einstein used inverse square law and the earths radius, and one times one equals one. So it would seem to be the same as at earths surface, or am i missing something ? [i must be otherwise there would be no more down once your on earths surface]
Time dilation occurs wherever gravity curves space-time so that one point in space experiences a different rate of time than another...
Please! I thought we had agreed that mass curves space-time! Gravity doesn't do anything to space-time, it is a consequence of how curved it is.
@Geezer, yes three minutes is three minutes but don't use an hour-glass style egg timer