Re: Time Flow in Different Gravity Potentials.




Der alte Hexenmeister wrote:
> "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.".
Boil Boil toil and trouble,
Swifty extract Androcles,
from his insane bubble.
http://www.wbabin.net/physics/cook3.htm

Sue...

>
>
> >
> > 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...
> >

.