Re: What is time?



In sci.physics.relativity, kenseto
<kenseto@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote
on Sun, 27 Aug 2006 13:43:28 GMT
<4khIg.72889$u11.6515@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:

"Gert Baars" <g.baars13@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:409c$44f0ec3e$5038fb52$24873@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
An object concidered in space can have a
velocity = 0 or greater (3D vector) if a force is applied
to it. An object though (with no considerable influence of gravity or
speed) is always moving in time. What makes time increment?

There are two kinds of time:
1. absolute time. Absolute time is eternal and the rate of passage of
absolute time is the same in all frames.
2. Clock time.....an interval of clock time is a clock second. The rate of
passage of clock second is different in different frames.
The relationship between absolute time and clock second is as follows: A
clock second will contain a different amount of absolute time in different
frames.

Presumably as defined by the formulae

x = (x_0 + vt_0)/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2)
t = (t_0 + vx_0/c^2)/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2)

where (x_0, t_0) is the absolute coordinate of the observer relative
to the absolute origin, and v is the (instantaneous) absolute velocity
of the observer.

This relationship explains why the speed of light is a constant math ratio
as measured by all observers as follows:
Light path length of ruler (299,792,458m)/the absolute time content for a
clock second co-moving with the ruler.
This new definition for the speed of light leads to a new improve theory of
relativity call IRT. IRT includes SRT as a subset. However, unlike SRT, the
equations of IRT are valid in all environments, including gravity. A
description of IRT is in the following link (page 4):
http://www.geocities.com/kn_seto/2005Unification.pdf

Ken Seto




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