Is spacetime disappearing at the center of a celestial body withmass?
Correction. Any acceleration is a divergence from the general flow of
spacetime. So if I am accelerating towards the center of the earth,
then the matrix of spacetime should be flowing outwards from the
center of the earth, not inwards. As I am stationary on the surface of
the earth, I am perceived as accelerating inwards, as the general flow
of spacetime goes outwards. Spacetime has to be continuously "created"
at the center of the earth. It shouldn't be disappearing there.
On Feb 1, 11:46*am, Zanthius wrote:
If the matrix of spacetime is accelerating inwards from everywhere on
the circumference of a sphere with mass, shouldn't spacetime then
disappear at the center of the mass? If you have two individuals on
opposite sides of this planet, one on the north pole and another one
one the south pole. Both these individuals are accelerating towards
each other by 9.81 m/s2, but they don't get any closer to each other.
If spacetime didn't disappear at the center of the earth, wouldn't it
be impossible for these two individuals to accelerate towards each
other?
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