How do we know gravity actually affects time?

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How do we know gravity actually affects time?

In: Physics

6 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

There was a fairly definitive experiment that was conducted, worth looking at if you want more info. Scientists took two atomic clocks put in into orbit and it’s partner clock was on Earth, compared the two after a bit and they were showing two different times. At least that’s what I can recall.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Einstein first described it in his theory of relativity, and since then it’s been directly observed using atomic clocks in orbit. In fact, in order for GPS to stay accurate, the clocks on the satellites used for GPS have to be occasionally corrected.

Anonymous 0 Comments

There is also a [study by NASA ](https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/nasas-twins-study-creates-portrait-human-body-after-year-space-180971945/) with twins on the effects of time in space as opposed to time earthbound.

Anonymous 0 Comments

You’ve already got a good answer here, but you might also be interested in the very first experimental test.

See in the early 20th century Einstein’s theory of relativity was controversial; at that time Newton’s theory of gravity still dominated the scientific field, and it produced different (mathematical) results from Einstein’s. But the instrumentation of the time was not advanced enough to allow the type of minute measurements terrestrial clocks can make today which made testing impossible… until nature provided the means.

On May 29, 1919 a total solar eclipse took place; Britain’s Royal Astronomer had realized that light from certain, known stars would have to pass through the sun’s gravitational field and that during the eclipse they would actually be visible. Since the positions of stars would be known before and after the eclipse, it would be possible to tell whether the sun’s gravitational field was bending light the way Einstein predicted, or not.

So off he sailed to the island of Principe off the western coast of Africa, a part of the world where the sun would be obscured most thoroughly (a sister expedition was dispatched to Brazil.) They measured the light from those stars and returned to England with the results, which conformed to Einstein’s prediction.

Anonymous 0 Comments

If my amateur grasp of general relativity is correct, gravity is caused by time not running uniformly. In other words, mass slows down time, and that effect somehow makes mass move towards mass

Anonymous 0 Comments

Happened to be watching Interstellar and reading “The Science of Interstellar” by Kip Thorne where he briefly described on Einstein’s theory on relativity.