Or, you could cite Einstein's Equivalence Principle, that the effects of gravitation and accelerated motion are interchangeable.
Except that Einstein was wrong.
If I move further away from a source of gravity, then I feel the gravity less. A good example of this is at a black hole. A person falling feet-first into a black hole will experience a stronger pull on his feet than his head.
But in an accelerating spaceship, my head and feet feel the same amount of "gravity".
Given that the two can be differentiated, the two can't be considered interchangable.
Or, you could cite Einstein's Equivalence Principle, that the effects of gravitation and accelerated motion are interchangeable.
Except that Einstein was wrong.
If I move further away from a source of gravity, then I feel the gravity less. A good example of this is at a black hole. A person falling feet-first into a black hole will experience a stronger pull on his feet than his head.
But in an accelerating spaceship, my head and feet feel the same amount of "gravity".
Given that the two can be differentiated, the two can't be considered interchangable.
You are completely wrong! Einstein's principle is partly where the math for working out the gravity from black holes works.![]()
Maybe we should put that one to a test. And since we had black holes as an example, we'll use something nearly as exaggerated... really tall people (averaging 186,000 miles tall).You can distinguish between gravity and accelaration due to the fact that, in an accelerating spaceship, the acceleration is uniform everywhere while in a gravitational field, the gravitational pull is weaker the further away from the mass you are.
General Relativity has been proven over and over again for the last 90 years.Except that Einstein was wrong.
When the starship starts accelerating constantly, this acceleration will be transmitted through the ship at the speed of light. You will have the back part of the ship that is accelerating and the front part, where acceleration has not reached yet.We load these people onto a spaceship, feet on the deck (towards the engines), and then fire the engines. Is acceleration uniform everywhere in the spaceship? Are these people feeling the same acceleration for both their heads and feet?
Wikipedia is not a replacement or substitute for a solid education. If you don't know this subject well enough to discuss it without Wikipedia, then you don't know the subject well enough.Shaw
-Wikipedia stuff-
Except that Einstein was wrong.
If I move further away from a source of gravity, then I feel the gravity less. A good example of this is at a black hole. A person falling feet-first into a black hole will experience a stronger pull on his feet than his head.
But in an accelerating spaceship, my head and feet feel the same amount of "gravity".
Given that the two can be differentiated, the two can't be considered interchangable.
^A solar sail for a trip to Mars by a crewed vehicle is impractical. The distance is too short. The acceleration of a sail based craft is slllooowww. By the time you get any real speed up, you could have gotten there much faster by other means.
Wikipedia is not a replacement or substitute for a solid education. If you don't know this subject well enough to discuss it without Wikipedia, then you don't know the subject well enough.Shaw
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equivalence_principle
"An observer in a windowless room cannot distinguish between being on the surface of the Earth, and being in a spaceship in deep space accelerating at 1g. This is not strictly true, because massive bodies give rise to tidal effects (caused by variations in the strength and direction of the gravitational field) which are absent from an accelerating spaceship in deep space."
Acceleration would only be equivalent to an uniform gravitational field - which does not exist.
As it is, acceleration and gravity are only equivalent in small physical systems - where one can't measure the tidal forces.
When the starship starts accelerating constantly, this acceleration will be transmitted through the ship at the speed of light. You will have the back part of the ship that is accelerating and the front part, where acceleration has not reached yet.We load these people onto a spaceship, feet on the deck (towards the engines), and then fire the engines. Is acceleration uniform everywhere in the spaceship? Are these people feeling the same acceleration for both their heads and feet?
But the acceleration WILL have the same value in every part of the ship it reached.
The speed of two different parts of the ship will be different, yes, but the acceleration - the rate of change in speed - will be the same throughout the accelerating ship.
Sorry... no shortcuts allowed.![]()
Wikipedia is not a replacement or substitute for a solid education. If you don't know this subject well enough to discuss it without Wikipedia, then you don't know the subject well enough.Shaw
-Wikipedia stuff-
Sorry... no shortcuts allowed.![]()
There was no reason to read your post beyond the Wikipedia link... and I didn't.Your condescending "no shortcuts allowed" ...
There is nothing to win. As I said, Wikipedia is not a replacement or substitute for a solid education (or good research).Shaw man you won't win the wiki thing...
I'll state it again... Wikipedia is not a replacement or substitute for a solid education. If you don't know this subject well enough to discuss it without Wikipedia, then you don't know the subject well enough.
I'll state it again... Wikipedia is not a replacement or substitute for a solid education. If you don't know this subject well enough to discuss it without Wikipedia, then you don't know the subject well enough.
You are joking of course. This is a public messageboard where anyone can express an opinion about anything. It's just like, well y'know it's just like real life.
[...]Your condescending "no shortcuts allowed" ...
As for taking a condescending position... if you can't take it, don't dish it out. Your "Read up on relativity" comment to Jimmy_C was just as condescending... with the notable difference being that I've earned the right to be condescending and you have not (yet).
[...]
Shaw man you won't win the wiki thing, I said the samething as you once and soon regretted it, not that I believed I was wrong.
Yes Sojourner, what about magnetic sails? wait wouldn't that still cut out the need to go to the moon?
Shaw on the other hand IS one of the references used on wikipedia and already has a better grasp on the subject of conversation here (and the mathematics behind it) than a large portion of the contributors to Wiki.
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