THe Principle of Relativity says that if something is moving in an inertial frame of reference (constant velocity) then it is impossible to determine its velocity without reference to an outside point i.e. an astronaut in a spaceship moving at constant velocity has no way of telling if he is stationary or moving at constant velocity if the spaceship has no windows.
I was wondering if the converse is true- ie if someone cannot tell if he is stationary or moving at constant velocity, then he must be in an inertial frame of reference. However- there is a counterexample- free fall or in stable orbits- astronauts seem to be in an inertial frame of reference but they aren't- since acceleration is absolute. so the converse is not necessarily true.
I was wondering if the converse is true- ie if someone cannot tell if he is stationary or moving at constant velocity, then he must be in an inertial frame of reference. However- there is a counterexample- free fall or in stable orbits- astronauts seem to be in an inertial frame of reference but they aren't- since acceleration is absolute. so the converse is not necessarily true.