note that GPS satellites have experienced that phenomenon.
since they experience different gravity field (in fact they are in
freefall, unlike us walkers), they experience time dilation/contraction


2014-02-27 0:40 GMT+01:00 John Berry <[email protected]>:

> On Thu, Feb 27, 2014 at 12:12 PM, leaking pen <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Not at all, however, if you are accelerating at a rate away from the body
>> that the clock is falling towards,
>>
>
> No offence to you, but I thought that misunderstanding this was impossible.
> You are not accelerating away from a gravity source the clock is falling
> towards.
>
>  These are 2 separate experiments related toEinstein's thought experiment
> about either being in an elevator and being subjected to uniform
> acceleration in free space (no gravity).
> OR being in an elevator sitting on the ground.
>
> You can't tell which test you are undergoing everything seems identical,
> So I am adding a test, you drop a clock, the instant the clock on the
> accelerating elevator is let go of it assume a constant relative velocity
> to every other object in space that is confusingly termed an inertial
> reference frame, it is no longer accelerated.  It can not be readily
> justified to experience time dilation from acceleration it isn't undergoing.
>
> So either the same happens in the elevator test on the planet in the
> gravity field also (which would be very dramatic in a black holes time
> dilation field) OR it doesn't and the equivalence principle falls over, at
> least wounded.
>
> As far as I am aware and can tell from looking, neither conclusion is
> expected, but one must be true, or something even stranger that is also not
> predicted a time dilation aura effecting objects around an accelerating
> object.
>
> The rest you wrote as far as I could tell did not relate to what I am
> proposing.
>
> John
>

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