Re: Time Flow in Different Gravity Potentials.




"Sue..." <suzysewnshow@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1135928548.591616.84130@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
> Henri Wilson wrote:
>> When reading about Einstein's 'theory', I persistently come across the
>> claim
>> that "time moves at different rates in different gravity potentials".
>>
>> Can some relativist expert please explain how time 'moves' or 'flows'?
>> How would its 'rate of flow' be defined?
>>
>>
>> HW.
>> www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm
>
> Will you take a Baptist expert's word for it?
> (I study their spending habits continually so I can
> fund my next political campaign)
> The 'clocks' in Einstein's theory do the funny
> things they do because they are viewed over
> unequal paths.

Little Mickey Zauberlehrling says 2AB/(t'A-tA) = c is
correct, and little Minnie Witch says 377 ohms is correct.
I can't get either child to learn their spells properly,
they are not as good as my former students,
Harry Potter and Hermione Granger.
They don't even play Quidditch.


> Surley you'll admit the 'time' you see on Mars
> is not the same as the 'time' you see on Neptune.
>
> Guns you judge on Earth to fire simultaneously
> on Mars and Neptune will not produce a midpoint
> collision of their projectiles.

Nor will those projectiles give an OWLS hoot about 377 ohms.


> AFAIK Einstein doesn't derive anything about
> 'time flow' from this effect and it is consistant
> with a constant speed of light.

The necromancer made time change to compensate
for the 377 ohms which isn't there.
Learn your spells properly, little witch, you've been
skipping arithmancy class which is why you don't know.
Hermione Granger always did her homework.

Repeat after me:
"Double double, toil and trouble,
Fire burn and Einstein bubble

Eye of Newt and toe of frog,
into Google goes the log."

You need Eye of Newt in all spells, little witch. Watch!

Androcles Dumbledore, der alte Hexenmeister,
Headmaster, sci.physics.hogwarts

Hagrid had Norbert packed and ready in a large crate.
'He's got lots o' rats an' some brandy fer the journey',
said Hagrid in a muffled voice. 'An' I packed his teddy
bear in case he gets lonely'.
>From inside the crate came ripping noises that sounded
to Harry as though teddy was having his head torn off.
J.K. Rowling, "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.".


>
> Extending the effect to cover a path that spans
> differing gravitational potentials *does* provide
> a kinematic mechanism for oscillating masses
> to loose inertial energy at different rates. This
> is consistant with accelerometers that vibrate
> slower, close to the earth.
>
> AFAIK Einstein doesn't derive anything about
> 'time flow' from this effect either.
>
> There are, however, metaphysical musings about
> cosmology, Hubble law, Expanding univierse,
> the mother-croc, Adam and Eve, the BB...etc.
> Ask your local priest rabai or shaman to
> explain. ;-)
>
> AFAIK, Einstein, late in his career concludes
> that the universe can be characterised in Euclidean
> space (3D+1T) and the effects explained as
> relativistic are *local* or near field. This is consistant
> with the near-field E/H behavior of Maxwell's equations,
> which is what the theory is based on.
>
> So time *flows* differently only when the price
> of petrol changes: ;-)
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noether_theorem
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coulomb_gauge
> http://web.mit.edu/8.02t/www/802TEAL3D/teal_tour.htm
>
> Sue...
>


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