Local reference frame: Difference between revisions

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Einstein and general relativity: Removed slightly misleading sentence about geeforces. Einstein's gravity is not really an inversion of the idea of a geeforce.
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==Einstein and general relativity==
When constructing his [[general theory of relativity]], [[Albert Einstein|Einstein]] tookmade the resultfollowing thatobservation: an accelerated body feels an apparent gravitational field ([[g-force|geeforce]]s), and inverted it. Aa freely falling object in a gravitational field will not be able to detect the existence of the field by making purely local measurements ("a falling man feels no gravity"). Einstein was then able to complete his general theory by arguing that the physics of curved spacetime must reduce over small regions to the physics of simple inertial mechanics (in this case [[special relativity]]) for small freefalling regions.
Einstein referred to this as "the happiest idea of my life".