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Sara asked us this question:"Astronauts in a space ship orbiting the earth feel weightlessness because the ship is in free fall towards the earth. In deep space they still feel the same weightlessness. My question is: Is the ship in free fall in deep space too?"What do you think?
How does the object that is freefalling "know " that the environment is telling it to move in a particular direction?
Because there is a gravitational field at that location telling it what to do.
Free motion as in Newtons 1st would be a better name
Everything has a curved trajectory
Quote from: Halc on 02/10/2018 11:41:52Everything has a curved trajectory...except light that's not being gravitationally lensed, presumably?
I don't think it was for Einstein geordief. The way I got it he didn't consider trajectories 'curved'. As I read him he thought of them as the shortest path, and how can the shortest path be curved? I know, you can argue the opposite, but that's what I got from reading him.=" Already in the first papers in which Einstein starts making use of the metric tensor to give an account of gravitation, he is at pains to establish the status of the geodesic equation as describing the motion of particles as “straight and uniform” (geradlinig und gleichförmig) even when subject to gravity. ... Einstein thought of (static) gravitational fields not as invariant force fields diverting particles from inertial motion. Already, in 1912, he thought of equation (1) as describing inertial motion on one hand, and as describing motion in the presence of (static) gravitational fields on the other. "It's funny but even when not knowing this I wondered how SpaceTime would 'look' if 'folded out' into what we normally would call 'straight lines'. Which also lead me to wonder how many simultaneous 'geodesics' there could be at one point in the SpaceTime we see astronomically. The answer I got was innumerable.
I keep hearing that a field is not a thing but a model.
Quote from: HalcEverything has a curved trajectory...except light that's not being gravitationally lensed, presumably?
Surely even light since it moves in gravitational fields no matter how weak?
What do you mean by " A "straight line" in GR is the shortest path.... " ?Try the quotes I gave and see if they agree with it.=Maybe I did misread what you meant saying that " Isn't euclidean straightness an idealization ". The way I understood that sentence was in pointing out that it was a limited truth, much like Newtonian physics versus relativity? You need to define your thoughts again.