It has been argued that the Earth is different compared to all other masses in the universe. What we feel as "gravity" in our frame of reference is simply we undergoing acceleration as the accelerating Earth pushes us. We witness the effects of "gravity" when the Earth accelerates up and catches a dropping apple. This has been proven by Einstein's equivalence principle. See: the accelerating elevator experiment.
Okay, I can understand your reasoning in this and "the accelerating elevator" does indeed support your view on what "gravity" actually is on the FE.
Now, if you can, could you answer these two following questions then, directly related to explanations above (
not meant to try and debunk your theory; only meant to find out "how much ground FE has already covered"):
1) Do you have an idea of what it is that makes Earth different from all other masses in the universe?
Meaning: what qualities of Earth make it so that it doesn't bend spacetime like the other masses, thus that it doesn't produce the same gravitational effects as the stars for instance?
I don't think it can be explained by the effects of the DE that pushes Earth's disk up, as it's also pushing all of the other celestial bodies upward. So, any theory as to what it is then?
2) a. Is there a study / a theory that explains
how Dark Energy pushes Earth's disk up?
Meaning: what are the qualities of DE that make it have this effect / make it exert the pushing force? Perhaps it's a massive energy-field constantly expanding in all directions, with Earth "on top of it" => being pushed up?
b. Is there a study / a theory that explains how DE interacts with the atoms that make up Earth's mass? Meaning: (this probably needs to be explained by chemistry) what interaction between the DE and Earth's atomic structure causes the "pushing up"? Why does the DE
hit Earth's mass, instead of going right through, as I reckon that the DE would be less dense than the matter that makes up Earth's disk.
(I'll leave it with these questions for now, so to not demand too much of your time at once.)
Gravity, like all other fictitious forces, arises in a non-inertial frame of reference. For example, relative to an accelerating observer on Earth, it seems that you are accelerating as you free-fall. However, in your frame of reference, you feel no acceleration other than the acceleration provided by air resistance, and this can be proven by attaching yourself with an accelerometer. Neglecting air resistance, the accelerometer would read zero. This is because free-fall isn't an acceleration; it appears to be an acceleration relative to a non-inertial frame of reference. Free-fall is actually an inertial motion, according to General Relativity.
And in order to understand FE's view on this, "Gravity" in the first sentence must be replaced by "the upward acceleration of Earth"?
So if I were to jump out of an airplane in the FE-world, I wouldn't actually be
falling down, but rather experience the air around me being pushed up as Earth's disk is rushing toward me (= my frame of reference).
And to someone standing on Earth's surface, watching me fall (= the observer being accelerated by Earth => the non-inertial frame of reference (?)) it would only appear as if I'm accelerating toward him, while in FE-reality it's the other way around.
I think I'm getting the hang of the logic behind "inertial and non-inertial frames of reference". Thank you for you clarifying explanation!
Masses can accelerate upward relative to each other and still exert gravitation. The acceleration by Dark Energy is not gravitation: it's used to mimic the effects of gravity in our frame of reference.
And here I will add that you deserve the credit for being able to logically and correctly explain "the gravity issue" in FE-world.
However, reading the remark made by PiratePete, there still seem to be a few limitations to your explanation. I will not pretend to fully understand what those limitations are, but it would be interesting to read what the problem exactly is with "the equivalence principle only applying locally" (e.g.: it's the first time that I hear that two simultaneously falling objects will hit the ground closer together; could this also happen on a flat Earth?)
Kind regards,