Re: answer to YBM's bell problem



rbwinn a écrit :
I just post the relevant facts. n' is not a transformation equation.
It is time on a clock in B that shows light to be traveling at a speed
of c.
Robert B. Winn

Given your mental disability which prevet you to understand more that
one question at a time, let's simplify the point since you're clearly
lost from the very beginning :

n'=t(1-v/w)

Well. In frame A, I consider two light rays on the (Ox) line (does it
remind you something ?). One at speed w=c in A, the other one at speed
w=-c in A. How would an observer in B would compute, in the context of
you "theory", using n', the speeds of both light rays simultaneously ?

Is there some kind of magic making its clock change whenever he consider
one light rays or the other one ?

--
By the way, next time you'll pretend I've proven
don't lie and write that I've proven Robert Winn'
"Galilean Transformation" to be absurd.
You can even provide the link :
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.physics.relati

Robert Winn's best fumble :
> The time n' in B is saying that the two light r
> of B

so... the ring bell in B but not in A (the bell i
of B whenever the light rays meet !)
.



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