• Spring in free fall

    From Luigi Fortunati@21:1/5 to All on Fri Nov 4 12:25:07 2022
    In my drawing
    https://www.geogebra.org/m/vkz6htmu
    the two springs A and B (with mass) have the same length at rest: 8.

    Spring A is in the remote space and maintains its length 8.

    Spring B is stationary in a well in the center of the Earth.

    Is spring B in free fall even though it is stationary?

    Spring B contracts with respect to its resting length, as it does in my drawing?

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  • From Richard Livingston@21:1/5 to Luigi Fortunati on Tue Nov 8 15:25:14 2022
    On Monday, November 7, 2022 at 2:15:04 AM UTC-6, Luigi Fortunati wrote:
    In my drawing
    https://www.geogebra.org/m/vkz6htmu
    the two springs A and B (with mass) have the same length at rest: 8.

    Spring A is in the remote space and maintains its length 8.

    Spring B is stationary in a well in the center of the Earth.

    Is spring B in free fall even though it is stationary?

    Spring B contracts with respect to its resting length, as it does in my drawing?

    Your diagram is correct, spring B will be compressed due to the gravity of
    the earth.

    To say that spring B is in free fall is ignoring the fact that it extends over an extended volume of space, and thus parts experience gravitational
    strains that other parts don't. Certainly the ends of the spring are not
    "in free fall", although you might argue that the center of gravity is.

    Rich L.

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  • From Luigi Fortunati@21:1/5 to All on Tue Nov 8 08:44:10 2022
    Richard Livingston martedì 08/11/2022 alle ore 16:25:14 ha scritto:
    In my drawing
    https://www.geogebra.org/m/vkz6htmu
    the two springs A and B (with mass) have the same length at rest: 8.

    Spring A is in the remote space and maintains its length 8.

    Spring B is stationary in a well in the center of the Earth.

    Is spring B in free fall even though it is stationary?

    Spring B contracts with respect to its resting length, as it does in my
    drawing?

    Your diagram is correct, spring B will be compressed due to the gravity of the earth.

    To say that spring B is in free fall is ignoring the fact that it extends over an extended volume of space, and thus parts experience gravitational strains that other parts don't. Certainly the ends of the spring are not
    "in free fall", although you might argue that the center of gravity is.

    Rich L.

    True.

    But also Einstein's elevator extends over an extended volume of space
    and, therefore, only its center is in free fall but not the top and
    bottom ends, where gravity is different.

    So, if we can't say my spring is in free fall, we can't say it for
    Einstein's elevator either!

    Luigi

    [[Mod. note -- If Einstein's elevator were as big as the Earth, then
    you'd be right. But the size of Einstein's elevator is much less than
    the size of the Earth (= the spatial scale over which the gravitational
    field varies).

    In the presence of non-uniform gravitational fields, "free fall" is a
    *local* phenomenon, i.e., it's rigorously defined (only) in terms of a
    limit where the size of our experimental region (i.e., the "elevator")
    goes to zero.
    -- jt]]

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  • From Luigi Fortunati@21:1/5 to All on Wed Nov 9 13:21:10 2022
    Luigi Fortunati marted=EC 08/11/2022 alle ore 01:44:10 ha scritto:
    Richard Livingston marted=EC 08/11/2022 alle ore 16:25:14 ha scritto:
    In my drawing
    https://www.geogebra.org/m/vkz6htmu
    the two springs A and B (with mass) have the same length at rest: 8.

    Spring A is in the remote space and maintains its length 8.

    Spring B is stationary in a well in the center of the Earth.

    Is spring B in free fall even though it is stationary?

    Spring B contracts with respect to its resting length, as it does in my
    drawing?

    Your diagram is correct, spring B will be compressed due to the gravity of >> the earth.

    To say that spring B is in free fall is ignoring the fact that it extends
    over an extended volume of space, and thus parts experience gravitational
    strains that other parts don't. Certainly the ends of the spring are not
    "in free fall", although you might argue that the center of gravity is.

    Rich L.

    True.

    But also Einstein's elevator extends over an extended volume of space
    and, therefore, only its center is in free fall but not the top and
    bottom ends, where gravity is different.

    So, if we can't say my spring is in free fall, we can't say it for
    Einstein's elevator either!

    Luigi

    [[Mod. note -- If Einstein's elevator were as big as the Earth, then
    you'd be right. But the size of Einstein's elevator is much less than
    the size of the Earth (= the spatial scale over which the gravitational
    field varies).

    In the presence of non-uniform gravitational fields, "free fall" is a
    *local* phenomenon, i.e., it's rigorously defined (only) in terms of a
    limit where the size of our experimental region (i.e., the "elevator")
    goes to zero.
    -- jt]]

    In my drawing
    https://www.geogebra.org/m/vkz6htmu
    I added a slider to modify the length of the spring at will: you say it
    is in "free fall" only when it is at zero and for no other value?

    [[Mod. note --
    No, I am saying that unless the spring is infinitesimally small, some
    part(s) of the spring may be in free fall AND other part(s) may (in
    practice, are very likely to) be not-in-free-fall. More generally,
    we need to be precise as to *what* either is or isn't in free-fall:
    simplying saying "the spring" isn't sufficiently precise. I expanded
    on this reasoning in a separate posting in this thread, which has not
    yet appeared.
    -- jt]]

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  • From Jonathan Thornburg [remove -color t@21:1/5 to Luigi Fortunati on Thu Nov 10 10:59:25 2022
    Luigi Fortunati <fortunati.luigi@gmail.com> wrote:
    In my drawing
    https://www.geogebra.org/m/vkz6htmu
    the two springs A and B (with mass) have the same length at rest: 8.

    Spring A is in the remote space and maintains its length 8.

    Spring B is stationary in a well in the center of the Earth.

    Is spring B in free fall even though it is stationary?

    Spring B contracts with respect to its resting length, as it does in my drawing?

    [[I'm discussing this in the context of Newtonian mechanics.]]

    I'll start with the easy question: Yes, spring B contracts with
    respect to its resting length, because it's in a spatially-variable gravitational field which points down at the top of spring B, and
    up at the bottom of spring B.

    Now to the trickier question: what about "free fall"?

    The concept of "being in free fall" is easy for a point mass.
    But Luigi is asking about extended bodies (bodies with non-trivial
    size and internal structure). Here there are different ways to think
    about what "being in free fall" means. In particular, we need to
    distinguish between two quite different questions:

    Question #1: Is the object's center of mass in free-fall? This is
    true if and only:
    (a) the net non-gravitational force acting on the object (i.e., the
    vector sum of all non-gravitational forces acting on the object)
    is zero. Or, we could say;
    (b) the net *external* non-gravitational force acting on the object
    (i.e., the vector sum of all *external* non-gravitational forces
    acting on the object, where "external" means "applied by something
    that's not itself part of the object") is zero.

    [Note that formulations (a) and (b) are actually exactly
    equivalent, because the vector sum of all *internal*
    non-gravitational forces acting on an object (i.e., forces
    where one part of the object exerts a force on another part
    of the object), must be zero by Newton's 2nd law.

    In practice, formulation (b) is usually more convenient,
    because it lets us ignore internal forces, e.g., in this
    case it lets us ignore the forces one part of spring B
    exerts on another part of spring B.]

    The answer to Question #1 for Luigi's spring B is "yes": spring B's
    center of mass is in free-fall, because there are no non-gravitational
    forces acting on the spring.

    Question #2: Is each part (or some specific part(s)) of the object
    in free-fall? For some small part X of the object (small enough that
    we can neglect it's internal structure, and assume that the gravitational
    field is constant across it's diameter), X is in free-fall if and only if
    the (vector) sum of any external non-gravitational forces acting on X is
    zero.

    If X is any part of spring B other than the part right at the center of
    the Earth, then the answer to question #2 is "no": there is a non-zero
    net force exerted on X by other parts of the spring.

    SUMMARY:

    The center-of-mass of Luigi's spring B *is* in free fall, but almost all
    of the individual parts of spring B are *not* in free fall. A common
    (albeit slightly imprecise) shorthand terminology for this is to say that "spring B is in free-fall in a tidal gravitational field".

    --
    -- "Jonathan Thornburg [remove -color to reply]" <dr.j.thornburg@gmail-pink.com>
    currently on the west coast of Canada
    "Why would you sell anyone your inevitable always increasing asset?"
    -- Derek Whittom, 2022-04-25

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  • From Luigi Fortunati@21:1/5 to Luigi Fortunati on Fri Nov 11 11:28:17 2022
    Jonathan Thornburg [remove -color to reply] giovedì 10/11/2022 alle ore> Luigi Fortunati <fortunati.luigi@gmail.com> wrote:
    In my drawing
    https://www.geogebra.org/m/vkz6htmu
    ,,,the two springs A and B (with mass) have the same length at rest: 8.

    Spring A is in the remote space and maintains its length 8.

    Spring B is stationary in a well in the center of the Earth.

    Is spring B in free fall even though it is stationary?

    Spring B contracts with respect to its resting length, as it does in my
    drawing?

    [[I'm discussing this in the context of Newtonian mechanics.]]

    I'll start with the easy question: Yes, spring B contracts with
    respect to its resting length, because it's in a spatially-variable gravitational field which points down at the top of spring B, and
    up at the bottom of spring B.

    Now to the trickier question: what about "free fall"?

    The concept of "being in free fall" is easy for a point mass.
    But Luigi is asking about extended bodies (bodies with non-trivial
    size and internal structure). Here there are different ways to think
    about what "being in free fall" means. In particular, we need to
    distinguish between two quite different questions:

    Question #1: Is the object's center of mass in free-fall? This is
    true if and only:
    (a) the net non-gravitational force acting on the object (i.e., the
    vector sum of all non-gravitational forces acting on the object)
    is zero. Or, we could say;
    (b) the net *external* non-gravitational force acting on the object
    (i.e., the vector sum of all *external* non-gravitational forces
    acting on the object, where "external" means "applied by something
    that's not itself part of the object") is zero.

    [Note that formulations (a) and (b) are actually exactly
    equivalent, because the vector sum of all *internal*
    non-gravitational forces acting on an object (i.e., forces
    where one part of the object exerts a force on another part
    of the object), must be zero by Newton's 2nd law.

    In practice, formulation (b) is usually more convenient,
    because it lets us ignore internal forces, e.g., in this
    case it lets us ignore the forces one part of spring B
    exerts on another part of spring B.]

    The answer to Question #1 for Luigi's spring B is "yes": spring B's
    center of mass is in free-fall, because there are no non-gravitational
    forces acting on the spring.

    Question #2: Is each part (or some specific part(s)) of the object
    in free-fall? For some small part X of the object (small enough that
    we can neglect it's internal structure, and assume that the gravitational field is constant across it's diameter), X is in free-fall if and only if
    the (vector) sum of any external non-gravitational forces acting on X is zero.

    If X is any part of spring B other than the part right at the center of
    the Earth, then the answer to question #2 is "no": there is a non-zero
    net force exerted on X by other parts of the spring.

    SUMMARY:

    The center-of-mass of Luigi's spring B *is* in free fall, but almost all
    of the individual parts of spring B are *not* in free fall. A common
    (albeit slightly imprecise) shorthand terminology for this is to say that "spring B is in free-fall in a tidal gravitational field".

    I agree with everything you write but, if so, no extended body could ever be in free fall!

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  • From Luigi Fortunati@21:1/5 to All on Tue Nov 15 08:45:58 2022
    Jonathan Thornburg [remove -color to reply] giovedì 10/11/2022 alle ore 11:59:25 ha scritto:
    Luigi Fortunati <fortunati.luigi@gmail.com> wrote:
    In my drawing
    https://www.geogebra.org/m/vkz6htmu
    the two springs A and B (with mass) have the same length at rest: 8.

    Spring A is in the remote space and maintains its length 8.

    Spring B is stationary in a well in the center of the Earth.

    Is spring B in free fall even though it is stationary?

    Spring B contracts with respect to its resting length, as it does in my
    drawing?
    .....
    Question #2: Is each part (or some specific part(s)) of the object
    in free-fall? For some small part X of the object (small enough that
    we can neglect it's internal structure, and assume that the gravitational field is constant across it's diameter), X is in free-fall if and only if
    the (vector) sum of any external non-gravitational forces acting on X is zero.

    If X is any part of spring B other than the part right at the center of
    the Earth, then the answer to question #2 is "no": there is a non-zero
    net force exerted on X by other parts of the spring.

    SUMMARY:

    The center-of-mass of Luigi's spring B *is* in free fall, but almost all
    of the individual parts of spring B are *not* in free fall.

    Based on what you yourself write, an extended body (without external constraints) in remote space is entirely in free fall in every single
    particle (none excluded), while the same extended body that falls into a
    well on the Earth, is not entirely in free fall because (almost) all its
    own particles (although without external constraints) bind each other!

    All of this confirms what I wrote: free fall near gravitational masses
    is *different* from free fall in remote space.

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  • From Phillip Helbig (undress to reply@21:1/5 to fortunati.luigi@gmail.com on Tue Nov 15 12:17:21 2022
    In article <tkv9hj$16lt$1@gioia.aioe.org>, Luigi Fortunati <fortunati.luigi@gmail.com> writes:

    Based on what you yourself write, an extended body (without external constraints) in remote space is entirely in free fall in every single particle (none excluded), while the same extended body that falls into a
    well on the Earth, is not entirely in free fall because (almost) all its
    own particles (although without external constraints) bind each other!

    All of this confirms what I wrote: free fall near gravitational masses
    is *different* from free fall in remote space.

    The difference is that tidal effects have to be taken into account near gravitational masses. All such discussions explicitly or implicitly
    assume that the tidal effects are "small enough". In other words, in
    the limit of arbitrarily small tidal effects, the two are equivalent.

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