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You are forgetting that the acceleration due to gravity is not constant and varies as you approach the body and the equations are only true for one instant the moment the body falls a little towards the gravitating mass the acceleration and therefore the force increases.
Geezer, I think you're basically reasoning along the same lines as general relativity, and in GR, gravity isn't a force, either. Your proof above is similar to Einstein's famous elevator experiment. If you're in an elevator, the "force" you experience as it accelerates upward at 9.8 m/s2 is indistinguishable from gravitational acceleration at the earth's surface (if you look only at a point, clearly, since you can tell that the earth's gravity is decreasing as you move away from it). If you follow through to the logical conclusion, our "force" of gravity is just an acceleration, so there's some reference frame (a freely falling one) in which this acceleration vanishes. Then if you add in lots of fancy math, you end up at general relativity.
Probably. By the way, I was editing something into my post as you quoted it, so you probably missed it. You might want to check this out:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equivalence_principleYou're assuming the equivalence of inertial mass and gravitational mass in your equation. There's no fundamental reason we know of yet why they should be the same, but they appear to be.
F = ma only works at non-relativistic speeds. As you near the speed of light, m increases, so for a constant acceleration, the force must also increase. The more general definition of force is f = δp/δt; i.e., force is the time rate of change of momentum. At non-relativistic speeds, δm = 0, so vδm/δt = 0. The change of momentum at non-relativistic speed is simply δp = mδv; at relativistic speed, it is δp = mδv + vδm. So δp/δt = mδv/δt + vδm/δt. Acceleration is a = δv/δt, so mδv/δt + vδm/δt = ma + vδm/δt. F = δp/δt works not only for objects with rest mass, but also for photons. Although a photon is not considered to have mass and force in general relativity, it certainly could by this definition.
So does this mean you believe there is a "force of gravity"?
Quote from: Geezer on 30/08/2011 07:21:06So does this mean you believe there is a "force of gravity"?I believe masses accelerate toward one another, resulting in a rate of change of momentum which can be calculated from Newton's law of gravitation or from general relativity. You may explain that acceleration in terms of a gravitational field, but what is a field but a mathematical description of an effect? I prefer to explain the cause in terms of interacting æthereal waves, but I'm not permitted to describe that model except in the New Theories section.
"This is why an accelerometer in free-fall doesn't register any acceleration; there isn't any."Which only goes to prove you should not believe everything in Wikipedia. That statement is complete bollocks nonsense.The reason an accelerometer does not measure acceleration in free fall is because there is no difference between the "sensor" and the "mass" of the accelerometer. They are both experiencing the same acceleration. That could be any value, including zero, but it sure as heck does not prove there is no acceleration.
Drop an atomic clock? They have to custom-build hovercarts to move them around to avoid the bumps of going over door lintels. The most recent and accurate atomic clocks rely on fountains of matter falling under gravity and constrained influenced by lasers and microwaves - not sure that would take well to being dropped, my casio f91-w would be more accurate and might not need millions to rebuild afterwards.The best accuracy over a long period of an atomic clock (USNO rubidium fountain) is around 1*10^-16 of a second. Even if the experiment introduced no error what so ever this would not allow the time differential to be measured. More importantly you do not just need to calculate the gravitational time dilation you need to calculate the correct four vector in a solution of the einstein equations/tensors - which to all intents is impossible, the assumptions you would have to make would drown any actual figures. do the sums for just the time dilation and you get nonsense. Drop something from 20m high, in the first second you will travel 5m, the second second you will travel 15m yet the variation in time dilation is unmeasurable.
I don't see why there would be a problem as time differential has already been measured over distances as small as one meter as previously mentioned.