Re: Did High Gs affect a Plane's Time Dilation measurements???
- From: "guskz@xxxxxxxxxxx" <guskz@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 29 May 2006 08:23:00 -0700
Sue... wrote:
Eric Gisse wrote:
guskz@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
In those NASA movies, a person undergoing high Gs in a plane can barely
move:
People are weak and fragile.
Couldn't the MECHANICAL (electrical, etc...) motion of clocks also be
affected? Therefore giving false readings for Time Dilation
measurements inside the plane?
No.
Since that will not be good enough, I ask a question in response: If
your theory is correct, what happens if I spin a clock in a centrifuge?
Also if a plane is flying at Mach speeds, can a pilot walk around
freely after acceleration to Mach speed or does he still feel abnormal
levels of pressure?
You can't spin a clock in centrifuge because the
instrument leads will twist up like a pigtail. How
why only the leads and not the gears as well, therefore affecting it's
time measurements?
ya going to measure time if you can't connect the
the test leads to it. :o)
Sue...
.
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