Widdekind Posted July 22, 2009 Posted July 22, 2009 (edited) Regarding Gravitational Time Dilation, according to N.D. Mermin (It's About Time, pg. 176), In a uniform Gravitational Field, the lower clock runs slower than the upper one by precisely the factor 1 + g D / c2. This has, seemingly, an intriguing Semi-Classical interpretation. For, let us see what "equivalent velocity" would produce the same Time Dilation factor: [math]\gamma \equiv 1 + g \; D / c^{2}[/math] Multiplying both sides by the Rest Energy of the Test Particle, w.h.t.: [math]E_{0} + KE = \gamma \; m \; c^{2} = m \; c^{2} + m \; g \; D = E_{0} + \Delta U_{g}[/math] Thus, the lower clock ticks slower by the same amount it would, if all of its additional GPE had been converted to KE (in flat space). Yes? Mod note: moved to its own thread Edited July 22, 2009 by swansont add mod note
swansont Posted July 22, 2009 Posted July 22, 2009 Yes, the dilation terms are potentials, and it can either be kinematic or gravitational.
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