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inertiels

Inertiels are a hypothetical class of elementary entities proposed in speculative physics to account for the origin of inertia or to serve as components in modified gravity theories. The term is a neologism derived from inertia, used to describe fields or particles that interact with spacetime in a way that yields a resisting force to acceleration beyond conventional mass-energy effects.

In theoretical models, inertiels may be described as gauge-like fields that couple to the metric or affine

As yet, inertiels have no empirical support. Their existence remains speculative and primarily discussed in theoretical

Related ideas include Mach's principle, the inertia–mass relationship, scalar and vector field theories, and emergent gravity

connection.
They
are
often
posited
to
be
nearly
massless
and
to
become
dynamically
relevant
only
in
accelerated
frames,
producing
inertial
effects
through
their
configuration
in
spacetime.
The
mathematical
formalisms
vary:
some
treat
inertiels
as
excitations
of
a
background
scalar
or
vector
field;
others
as
emergent
quasi-particles
arising
from
deeper
Machian
or
entropic
considerations.
papers
or
science-fiction
inspired
models.
Experimental
constraints
from
precision
tests
of
the
equivalence
principle,
free-fall
measurements,
and
cosmology
place
limits
on
possible
couplings
and
energy
scales.
If
real,
inertiels
could
offer
alternative
explanations
for
inertia
or
serve
as
components
in
modified
gravity
theories
that
aim
to
address
cosmological
observations
without
dark
matter.
scenarios.
The
term
remains
controversial
and
is
not
part
of
standard
physics.
See
also
inertia,
Mach's
principle,
and
modified
gravity
theories.