2inquisitive said:
.I will simply copy from wiki to educate you, Dale!
You obviously misunderstood the quotes you copied. They don't support your position.
Wikipedia said:
The two main two categories of noninertial frame are:
Accelerated frames, where the reference coordinate system usually appears to have uniform acceleration with respect to any inertial frame, and
Rotating frames, where the reference coordinate system rotates about an axis compared to an inertial coordinate system.
Both of these case can be easily distinguished from inertial frames in a straightforward way, by the presence of geeforces. ”
“ In theoretical physics, an accelerated reference frame is usually a coordinate system or frame of reference, that undergoes a constant and continual change in velocity over time as judged from an inertial frame.
An object in an accelerated frame will usually be compelled to move with the frame by some sort of applied force. If this force is applied mechanically to one part of the object, the transmission of this "holding force" through the object will make it seem to the object (feeling accelerational "gee-forces") as if it is suspended in a gravitational field.
Frames and flat spacetime
If a region of spacetime is declared to be Euclidean, and effectively free from obvious gravitational fields, then if an accelerated coordinate system is overlaid onto the same region, it can be said that a uniform gravitational field exists in the accelerated frame. An object accelerated to be stationary in the accelerated frame will "feel" the presence of the field, and thay will also be able to see environmental matter with inertial states of motion (stars, galaxies, etc.) to be apparently falling "downwards" in the field along "curved spacetime" trajectories as if the field is real.
In frame-based descriptions, this supposed field can be made to appear or disappear by switching between "accelerated" and "inertial" coordinate systems.
I will continue to say "frame force" instead of "geeforce".
As a fan of GR I would think you would already be aware that frame forces are not "felt", only infered from observed motion in the accelerated frame. In other words, since they accelerate all parts of all objects equally they cannot be physically measured. For example, place a scale underneath a satellite in orbit and no force will be measured, despite the fact that the satellite is being accelerated by the gravitational frame force. Now, place the scale underneath a person on the ground and you measure a force. Which force? Not the gravitational frame force, the scale has already been shown to be insensitive to that. Instead you physically measure the action-reaction pair of contact forces between the person's feet and the ground.
The same analysis can be made in a rotating frame, like a rotating space station's rest frame. A scale placed under a person in the space station can measure a contact force between the person and the station. In the rotating frame he is not accelerating because the frame force is balanced by the contact force. Meanwhile, an object released from the space station will accelerate under the frame force in the rotating frame, but a scale placed under the object will measure nothing. Again, nothing measured with only the frame force, something measured with a frame and a holding force, so the frame force is not measurable only the holding force.
Note that frame forces do not come in action-reaction pairs (I am sure you remember that whole conversation with BillyT). And, as Wiki says, "An object accelerated to be stationary in the accelerated frame will 'feel' the presence of the field". So it is only through the application of some mechanical "holding force" that frame forces are felt. In other words, it is actually the mechanical force that is felt, not the frame force.
2inquisitive said:
You cannot feel the force, or measure the frequency unless you do it from the accelerated frame. You CAN, however, describe the inertial frames from the accelerated frame, the frame of the detector.
The bottom line is that the "felt" force is part of the physics of the problem. It is an observable fact. If you make any description where that observable fact disappears then you are not correctly describing the situation. Simply drawing lines and saying "this point is (20,7)" or "this point is (-5,41)" cannot make measurable forces appear or disappear. Regardless of wether the lines are straight or curved, accelerating or inertial, all physically measurable forces will still be felt. If you actually understood reference frames you would realize that the fact that the frame forces are not measurable is actually the only reason that it is possible to use accelerating frames in an analysis. You can add as many frame forces (or as few, even 0) as you wish and you will not change any measurement results.
So, in our rocket scenario what is the measurable force? The rocket exhaust produces a measurable force on the rocket and the rocket produces a measurable force on the pilot etc. No other forces are measurable. Any analysis which is correct must maintain that fact: the force between the rocket and the pilot must be measurable during the engine burn and must be zero otherwise. So let's examine the situation in an inertial and an accelerating frame and let's consider the pilot and scale as a single free body. The only forces acting on the body are any frame forces and the contact force from the ship.
Accelerating frame without engine burn: Since we are in the accelerating frame there is a frame force pushing down on the body. The engine is off so there is no opposing contact force. The unbalanced frame force leads both to the observed downward acceleration and the observed measurement of no contact force on the scale.
Inertial frame without engine burn: Since we are in the inertial frame there is no frame force. The engine is off so there is no contact force. This lack of forces leads both to the observed lack of acceleration and the observed measurement of no contact force on the scale.
Accelerating frame with engine burn: Since we are in the accelerating frame there is a frame force pushing down on the body. Since the engine is on there is a balancing contact force pushing up. The balanced pair of forces leads both to the observed lack of acceleration and the measurement of the contact force on the scale.
Inertial frame with engine burn: Since we are in the inertial frame there is no frame force. Since the engine is on there is an unbalanced contact force pushing up. This unbalanced contact force leads both to the observed upwards acceleration and the measurement of the contact force on the scale.
The take home message is that the rocket's force is an observable force. As such it is observed in all frames, inertial and non-inertial. Although frames disagree about the motion, all frames agree that the motion is consistent with the observed forces.
I can hardly believe that you are still so ignorant about reference frames with as much time as you and I have spent discussing them. I am at a loss to figure out how to get these ideas through to you. I have tried description after description, math, logic, examples, and still you don't understand. I don't know if you are being deliberately ignorant or if this is just a difficult concept for you to grasp. All I know is we have been discussing these ideas for literally months now and you are still completely unable to use even the most basic concepts. I am truly sorry for my failure to get through to you.
-Dale