Falling charges

Abstract
The radiative damping force on an electrically charged particle falling freely in a static weak gravitational field is computed in the nonrelativistic limit of small velocities. It is shown that, in this limit, the force separates naturally into two components, a conservative part which arises from the fact that the mass of the particle is not concentrated at a point but is partly distributed as electric field energy in the space surrounding the particle, and a nonconservative part which depends linearly on both the velocity and the Riemann tensor. The conservative force is shown to correspond to a repulsive inverse square potential and to make a retrograde contribution to the perihelion precession. The nonconservative part is shown to produce an average energy loss identical with that of the traditional formula which is used for accelerations caused by nongravitational forces. Because the nonconservative force depends on the velocity rather than its second derivative, however, the phenomenon of preacceleration does not occur with gravitational forces. The questions answered by this investigation are of conceptual interest only, since the forces involved are far too small to be detected experimentally.

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