Given the equivalence principle, I would expect any object in freefall to have the same frame of reference, which would mean the same time dilation. I'd like to verify my understanding of this.
For example, let's say there are two space ships in orbit around a massive body, both at 5000 km. They then synchronize their clocks and both use equal and opposite thrust (such that they both experienced identical acceleration) to cruise at different heights relative to the massive body 5000 + X km and 5000 - X km. They then reverse the maneuver to end up back at 5000 km again traveling at the same speed. In this scenario, I would expect their clocks to still be synchronized. Is this the case? Or does the differing gravitational fields affect their clocks differently?
If so, this would lead me to the conclusions that time for someone at the center of earth would move at the same rate as someone in orbit / freefall. It would also lead me to the conclusion that clocks close to a black hole would be fundamentally moving at the same rate as clocks in orbit around earth.
For the benefit of readers (not necessarily answerers), this situation is materially different from the time dilation difference between someone at sea level on earth vs someone on a mountain top, because the acceleration needed to resist gravity at sea level is higher than on a mountain top (further away from the earth's center of gravity). Its also materially different from the difference in time dilation between someone on the surface of the earth vs someone in freefall in orbit, since according to general relativity only the person on earth is accelerating, while the person in orbit is not.
I want to be careful to distinguish fundamental time dilation from apparent time dilation. Eg, acceleration causes fundamental time dilation, where the object that undergoes more acceleration experiences less time. Whereas velocity differences between two objects cause apparent time dilation, where the objects each see each other's clocks running slower, but they both see each other's clocks slowed by the same rate. A secondary question is: does strength of the gravitational field affect apparent time dilation? I would assume not. Its harder for me to think up a scenario where two ships could sync up clocks, travel to two different gravitational fields using the same acceleration, and be also traveling at the same speed (so as to eliminate the apparent time dilation due to different speeds), such that any apparent time dilation would only be due to existing in different gravitational fields.
FYI, I've searched for the answer here already, but haven't found an answer that has been precise enough (or possibly accessible enough - since I'm not skillful enough with the math):
- Gravitational Time dilation for motion in a gravitational field
- Time dilation in a gravitational field and the equivalence principle
- Relationship between freefall velocity time dilation and gravitational time dilation in a Schwarzschild metric
- Gravitational Time dilation for motion in a gravitational field
- Gravitational time dilation at the earth's center
- Gravitational Time Dilation vs Acceleration Time Dilation
- Is gravitational time dilation different from other forms of time dilation?