Liste des Groupes | Revenir à p relativity |
Python <python@invalid.org> wrote:Ah ah ah, the evil calibration is definitely
Le 17/08/2024 à 14:56, Maciej Wozniak a écrit :Indeed. Pendulum clocks cannot serve as absolute time keepers,W dniu 17.08.2024 o 14:52, Python pisze:>**An Interesting Case of Mental Blockage and Cognitive Dissonance:**>
>
*Einstein-Poincaré Synchronization Procedure and Dr. Lengrand*
>
What's fascinating about certain cranks is that just when you think
you've seen all the absurdities they can come up with, they manage to
produce something even worse. Their cognitive dissonance and ability
to pull out bizarre notions from who knows where, on top of a
perfectly well-defined technical procedure, is astonishing. We've seen
this before with GPS, where Hachel invents all sorts of fantasies,
like atomic clocks in the receivers or synchronization with a clock
infinitely far away in a fourth spatial dimension...
>
This is a report of exchanges on the synchronization procedure
described by Einstein in his 1905 paper, discussions that took place
17 years ago and more recently on sci.physics.relativity and
fr.sci.physique.
>
https://groups.google.com/g/fr.sci.physique/c/KgqI9gqTkR8/m/oMc9X0XjCWMJ
>
*Reminders on the Procedure:*
>
Two identical clocks, A and B, are stationary relative to each other
at a certain distance. Their identical functioning (within measurement
accuracy)
>
Taking 2 identical pendulum clocks blows
this pathetic bullshit out.
>
Not at all. A pendulum by itself is not a clock. The
system Earth-Pendulum is.
since they need to be calibrated against a real clock.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.