All Questions
81
questions
2
votes
1
answer
76
views
How to properly combine kinetic and gravitational time dilation effect?
I developed a time dilation calculator that includes both kinetic (Lorentz Factor) and gravitational (Schwarzschild Metric Formula) factors to assess the time difference between Earth and satellites. ...
8
votes
5
answers
1k
views
Do you always experience the gravitational influence of other mass as you see them in your frame?
You see a galaxy far away. That galaxy is attracting you with a certain amount of gravity. I'm wondering if the gravity influence of the galaxy on you, as measured by you, always ends up being what ...
3
votes
2
answers
86
views
Tug of war between observers in frames with different rate of time
You have a very dense hollow sphere of matter. Observer A is inside the sphere inside a rocket. Observer B is in an identical rocket outside the sphere where the ring's gravity is negligible. They are ...
0
votes
0
answers
40
views
Topological illustration of spacetime dilation: which function should I use for isometric lines spacing?
Scientific popularization, when it comes to illustrating spacetime dilation around massive objects, often relies on the description of a two-dimensional square-grid, which can be regarded as a cross-...
3
votes
1
answer
134
views
Time dilation and angular velocity
Is angular velocity (the horizontal rotation of a massive disc falling through the air) sensitive to time dilation or invariant to it? Will its angular velocity (speed of rotation) increase, decrease ...
1
vote
0
answers
31
views
Gravitational Time Dilation: How to find the time difference between orbits at different radii? [closed]
I want to calculate the difference in time measured by a clock at on earths surface (r=6000km), and a geostationary satellite (r=26000km). My approach is as follows:
For simplicity, we consider curves ...
4
votes
2
answers
628
views
GR contribution to time dilation when both clocks are falling freely
When reading simplified explanations of time dilation experienced by satellites, such as those used for the GPS and other satellite navigation systems, the time dilation is often presented as having ...
0
votes
1
answer
60
views
Effect of gravitational time dilation on a classic weighted pendulum clock versus a hybrid pendulum clock with a battery
A classical pendulum clock is powered by gravitational potential energy by weights. While a hybrid pendulum clock is somehow propelled by electric current. Both have the same pendulum swing as the ...
0
votes
0
answers
37
views
Is there a formula for gravitational time dilation at the cosmological scale?
There is a standard formula for gravitational time dilation used in eg the operation of the global positioning system. It is based on the integration of g(h) where g is a function relating ...
1
vote
1
answer
92
views
GENERAL RELATIVITY: gravitational time dilation outside 2 bodies [closed]
I know that gravitational time dilation near a single body is:
$$T_2=T_1\sqrt{1-\frac{2GM}{rc^2}} $$
Can you give gravitational time dilation formula when in proximity to multiple bodies?
2
votes
2
answers
834
views
Why does time flow more slowly on the ground than on a mountain? [duplicate]
I'm reading the book The Order of Time by 'Carlo Rovelli', which says that time flows more slowly on the ground than on a mountain. It also says that the presence of matter changes how time flows, and ...
-3
votes
1
answer
99
views
Would time dilation increase the distance between objects? [closed]
Two objects are moving towards a gravity well. They are at $x$ distance from each other and moving at a fixed speed. The gravity well is massive enough for the objects to experience significant time ...
0
votes
1
answer
80
views
How to sync up different timelines and real events in general relativity? [closed]
Imagine this scenario:
Mike lives on a massive planet, so massive he experiences time going slowly.
Le petit prince lives on a small planet ( not much time dilation )
After millions of years (making ...
8
votes
7
answers
4k
views
Why don't two accelerated clocks behave like two clocks in a gravitational field?
If we immerse two clocks in a gravitational field at different altitudes (with the approximation that both heights share the same g for equivalence to be true), the falling and Schwarzschild observers ...
0
votes
1
answer
112
views
Understanding consequences of spacetime relativity
If I understood right, time flows slower where there is more gravitational force (or to be more precise, as it was pointed out to me, where gravitational potential is lower), compared to where there ...