Speed and Gravitational Deflection
Most recent answer: 05/02/2014
- Diego Sebasti?(age 39)
Madrid, Spain
Your friend is right. Let's look at an extreme case. Throw a ball up slowly. It will "deflect" so much that it falls right back to Earth. Throw it up very fast. Ignoring air friction, it will keep going up forever, never falling back to Earth. Those are really different paths!
I think perhaps what you remember is that the path doesn't depend on the mass of the ball, assuming it's small compared to that of the planets etc. around. In general relativity one says that the "geodesic" path doesn't depend on the mass of the object. Those geodesic paths, however, are in four dimensions, including time. So if two objects share a piece of geodesic path, that means that they're moving with the same velocity.
Mike W.
(published on 05/02/2014)