How do I reconcile these two definitions of acceleration?
$$a=\frac{d\bar{v}}{dt}=(\frac{dv^k}{dt}+v^i v^j \Gamma^k_{ij})\bar{e}_k \tag{1}$$
and
$$a^k=v^{\small\beta} \nabla_{\small\beta} v^k.\tag{2}$$
I tried doing it for gravity in polar coordinates.
$v^r=gt$
$r=\frac{1}{2} gt^2$
This clearly works for the first formula because
$a=\frac{d\bar{v}}{dt}=(\frac{dv^r}{dt}+v^r v^r \Gamma^r_{rr})\bar{e}_r $
and
$\Gamma^r_{rr}=0$
Now, the second formula.
$a^r = v^r \nabla_r v^r $ because $v^\theta =0$
$a^r = v^r (\frac{\partial v^r}{\partial r}) $
?
$= \frac{\partial r}{\partial t} (\frac{\partial v^r}{\partial r})=\frac{\partial v}{\partial t} $
Is this correct?
If so, how should I do it in general?