Re: What is Proper Time?
- From: "Androcles" <Headmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 2008 06:30:22 GMT
"The Ghost In The Machine" <ewill@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:6v84a5-2bl.ln1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
| In sci.physics.relativity, HW@....(Dr. Henri Wilson)
| <HW@>
| wrote
| on Tue, 04 Mar 2008 19:51:35 GMT
| <hq8rs31j1frdhuksnoq1pfqjtieaqg47n7@xxxxxxx>:
| > On Tue, 4 Mar 2008 05:21:11 -0800, The Ghost In The Machine
| > <ewill@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
| >
| >>In sci.physics.relativity, Artful
| >><artful@xxxxxxxxxx>
| >> wrote
| >
| >>>> No, it is relatively simple to acheive this. ...just use my
'instantaneous
| >>>> universe' concept....(an infinite array of pre-synched clocks)
| >>>
| >>> They will only remain be synchronized in the frame of reference where
they
| >>> are all at rest.
| >>>
| >>
| >>If one assumes an array of presynchronized clocks in
| >>accordance with a preferential frame, then, in this frame
| >>(or a frame immobile thereto), one can pick an arbitrary
| >>point as the origin, and then work with circles (or
| >>intervals) of increasing radii, leading to a series of
| >>pulses (L, -L/c) (where (x,t) is an event) from clock L
| >>(which is conveniently L units distant, for an L > 0).
| >
| > The clocks are in absolute synch in ALL frames, Ghost.
|
| Certainly they are, in BaTH. I'm in SR.
SR - Stupid Relativity.
Point out the experiment that showed 'the "time" required by
light to travel from A to B equals the "time" it requires to travel
from B to A' , crank.
.
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- Re: What is Proper Time?
- From: Paul B. Andersen
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- Re: What is Proper Time?
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