
Earth Gravity
One of the things that had baffled me for quite a while had been the gravity on our own planet. Seems silly to think about it but the question had always lingered in the back of my mind. I understood that Earth is trapped in Sun’s orbit due to its gravity and the same relationship applies when explaining the effect of earth’s gravity on the moon. Einstein explained that the size of a massive object, such as our sun, warps the fabric of space and time around it. Planets follow the path of this warped fabric. That theory explains the gravity among stars and planets, but how does it relate to the gravity here on earth? But what exactly keeps you and me on the ground? Why do plant roots point directly toward the center of the earth? The answer comes from another force being exerted on the Earth and that force is Inertia. This force is one of the key principles of Einstein’s theory of general relativity. Because of the amount of force being exerted on the Earth due to its acceleration around the Sun, an opposite force (gravity) is being exerted from the Earth to counter the force of Inertia. Aha!
An excerpt from Walter Isaacson book “Einstien: His life and Universe” gave an excellent visual example of this:
“A person in a closed windowless chamber who feels his feet pressed to the floor will not be able to tell whether it’s because the chamber is in outer space being accelerated upwards or because it is at rest in a gravitational field. If he pulls a penny from his pocket and lets it go, it will fall to the floor at an accelerating speed in either case. Likewise, a person who feels she is floating in a closed chamber will not know whether because the chamber is in free fall or hovering in a gravity-free region of outer space. “
To state is even more simply, the force applied when an object is resisted due to the Inertia is equal to the weight of the object. There is equivalence between all inertial effect, such as resistance to acceleration, and gravitational effects, such as weight. They are both manifestations of the same structure, which is called an Inertio-gravitational field.