Sujet : Re: Old vs new
De : jp (at) *nospam* python.invalid (Python)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativityDate : 04. May 2025, 21:39:09
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Nemoweb
Message-ID : <ckeOUZwJUjMcsDBssvNhmPHiWzU@jntp>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
User-Agent : Nemo/1.0
Le 04/05/2025 à 22:02, Maciej Woźniak a écrit :
On 5/4/2025 8:55 PM, Python wrote:
> Le 04/05/2025 à 20:44, Maciej Woźniak a écrit :
>> On 5/4/2025 8:10 PM, Python wrote:
>> > Le 04/05/2025 à 10:38, Maciej Woźniak a écrit :
>> >> On 5/4/2025 9:43 AM, Python wrote:
>> >> > Le 04/05/2025 à 09:27, Maciej Woźniak a écrit :
>> >> >> On 4/10/2025 10:41 PM, Paul.B.Andersen wrote:
>> >> >>
>> >> >> > GPS clocks are adjusted down by (1 - 4.4647e-10)
>> >> >> > so the adjusted clock will measure a mean solar day
>> >> >> > to last 86400 s, and the clock will stay in sync with UTC.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Well, if you "observe" dilating time - it's
>> >> >> not because your idiot guru has caught God's
>> >> >> balls, it's because he has inspired you to
>> >> >> invent a brandly new method of counting time.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Now: as your method is not only brandly new,
>> >> >> but also utterly idiotic - nobody really
>> >> >> wants to count time your way. Even you,
>> >> >> yourself are not really THAT stupid.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> And time counted the old way doesn't want to
>> >> >> dilate. Too bad.
>> >> >
>> >> > Why 1 - 4.4647e-10 and not another value for every given satellite?
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >>
>> >> Because another value wouldn't work.
>> >
>> > Paraphrasing the question in not an answer.
>>
>> Cutting off another question and pretending
>> not to notice it is not an answer too
>>
>> Because it is so is not an
>> > answer also.
>> >
>> > Why "another value wouldn't work" ?
>
>>> Why the same value of each and every satellite?
>
> No answer?
Sorry