Re: transformation equations



On Sep 4, 5:33 pm, PD <TheDraperFam...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Sep 4, 4:04 pm, "Sue..." <suzysewns...@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:



On Sep 4, 4:43 pm, rbwinn <rbwi...@xxxxxxxx> wrote:

[...]

t'=t is a common standard for time. Now you scientists claim that you
have a clock that is slower in the frame of reference that is moving.
That does not change t'=t. You measured the speed of light using the
slower clock and got c. That does not change the common standard for
time, t'=t.

<~<
Einstein's relativity principle states that:

All inertial frames are totally equivalent
for the performance of all physical experiments.

In other words, it is impossible to perform a
physical experiment which differentiates in any
fundamental sense between different inertial frames.

You've mentioned this before. You apparently have a different concept
of what "any fundamental sense" means.

If air-marshal's on near luminal speed flights had
to use different powder loads than slower flights
to achieve the same force against a target, that would be a
"fundamental sense", don't you think?

Sue...


By definition, Newton's laws of motion take the same
form in all inertial frames. Einstein generalized
this result in his special theory of relativity by
asserting that all laws of physics take the same
form in all inertial frames. >~>

http://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/em/lectures/node108.html


In other-other words:
Beards, clocks, burning candles, growing bacteria and
promiscuous rabbits can't be affected by matter
moving toward them while an equivalent ammount of matter
is moving away. (inertial motion).

Sue...

Robert B. Winn

.



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