It measures acceleration RELATIVE TO WHAT!!!??
Relative to an inertial frame of reference.
When you take a tape measure and measure something as 24" what is that 24" relative to?
IAS, I hate to say it but Tom is correct in the mechanics of how a gravimeter works. It's a type of (and works on the same principle as) an accelerometer. If you have a 4th Generation iPod Nano, iPod Touch, or even an iPhone, you can put them into a diagnostic mode and gain direct access to the accelerometer readings.
However, I wonder if it's the position of the FES that gravity is an illusion, or if it a force that simply doesn't exert itself on Earth?
FFS you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink. I was going to try to assist tom in discovering why he was babbling nonsense, but evidently that isn't going to happen.
No Tom isn't correct. He is trying to use people's ignorance to show that his gravimeter example is proof of anything other than the equivalence principle.
When you measure something as 24" on a tape measure it is relative to a
base (usually zero) 24"-0" = 24".
A gravimeter works in the same way. It measures acceleration relative to a base value. Guess what that value is?
FreefallWhen placed on something in contact with the Earth's surface the meter will measure an acceleration relative to it 32.2 ft/s
2 -0ft/s
2 = 32.2 ft/s
2.
When in "freefall" and the accelerometer will measure 0 ft/s
2 guess why?
Because 0 ft/s
2 - 0 ft/s
2 = 0 ft/s
2...Take a gravimeter into free fall sometime. The arrow points to zero acceleration...
Is exactly what would be expected.
It's not going anywhere.
However is misleading..... beceause there is no RELATIVE TO included and his statement proves nothing.
When held fixed in a gravitational field by, for example, applying a ground reaction force or an equivalent upward thrust, the reference frame for an accelerometer (its own casing) accelerates upwards with respect to a free-falling reference frame. The effect of this reference frame acceleration is indistinguishable from any other acceleration experienced by the instrument.
Congratulations on falling for exactly what he wanted you to fall for.