Re: ? ? ?

Liste des GroupesRevenir à s physics 
Sujet : Re: ? ? ?
De : ttt_heg (at) *nospam* web.de (Thomas Heger)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativity sci.physics sci.math
Date : 09. Mar 2024, 09:15:31
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <l52gkhFt900U1@mid.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
User-Agent : Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.0; WOW64; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/31.4.0
Am 08.03.2024 um 10:10 schrieb Maciej Wozniak:
W dniu 08.03.2024 o 09:12, Thomas Heger pisze:
Am 07.03.2024 um 15:41 schrieb Maciej Wozniak:
W dniu 07.03.2024 o 07:57, Thomas Heger pisze:
>
The flow of time is assumed to be constant,
>
Assumed by whom?
It usually is, but exceptions happen.
>
I personally support the idea of local time, which is always flowing
forward in the local environment, but which is not universal.
>
You may support it, it's still stupid.
>
>
I needed this assumption (which stems imho from Poincaré) for my
'book':
>
And GPS staff needed the opposite assumption
for their system to work. What do you find
more important - your "book" or working
GPS?
>
No, because the GPS does not violate my assumptions.
>
Yes, it does. You may pretend it doesn't - it doesn't
impress me the slightest.
>
>
>
GPS is pyhsically connected to the Earth, hence 'lives' in the same
'time-domain' (uses Earth time).
>
What is the range of Earth time, then?
If timer is local (opposite to 'universal'), than Earth time is valid on Earth or nearby.
In other locations even the direction of time does not need to be the same.
This means:
there might be regions of the universe, where time runs backwards from our perspective.
Such regions are invisible and may eventually drift right through our world and we could not see them.
I use the catch phrase 'universe around the corner' for this effect (instead of 'parallel universe').

>
But remote celestial object do not necessarily do, and may eventually
use an axis of time, which has an angle towards our time.
>
What kind of object does use time?
I regard matter as 'timelike stable patterns'.
This includes 'timelike', hence matter is 'frame dependent'.
This is a very unusual concept, hence you should read about my idea in my 'book':
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1Ur3_giuk2l439fxUa8QHX4wTDxBEaM6lOlgVUa0cFU4/edit?usp=sharing TH
Does a rock do? What for?
>

Date Sujet#  Auteur
7 Mar 24 * Re: ? ? ?32Maciej Wozniak
8 Mar 24 `* Re: ? ? ?31Thomas Heger
9 Mar 24  `* Re: ? ? ?30Thomas Heger
9 Mar 24   +* Re: ? ? ?13Bogdan Guleichik Balagul
10 Mar 24   i`* Re: ? ? ?12Thomas Heger
10 Mar 24   i `* Re: ? ? ?11Hania Pusztai Sebestyén
15 Mar 24   i  `* Re: ? ? ?10Thomas Heger
15 Mar 24   i   `* Re: ? ? ?9Connie Bairashevski Balashoff
17 Mar 24   i    `* Re: ? ? ?8Thomas Heger
17 Mar 24   i     `* Re: ? ? ?7Chellos Leontarakis
21 Mar 24   i      `* Re: ? ? ?6Thomas Heger
21 Mar 24   i       `* Re: ? ? ?5Péter Juhász
23 Mar 24   i        `* Re: ? ? ?4Thomas Heger
23 Mar 24   i         `* Re: ? ? ?3TReena Pooja Kishan
25 Mar 24   i          `* Re: ? ? ?2Thomas Heger
25 Mar 24   i           `- Re: ? ? ?1Smith Matoke Yamamura
10 Mar 24   `* Re: ? ? ?16Maciej Wozniak
12 Mar 24    `* Re: ? ? ?15Thomas Heger
12 Mar 24     `* Re: ? ? ?14Maciej Wozniak
14 Mar 24      `* Re: ? ? ?13Thomas Heger
14 Mar 24       +- Re: ? ? ?1Osiris Moy
17 Mar 24       `* Re: ? ? ?11Thomas Heger
17 Mar 24        `* Re: ? ? ?10Maciej Wozniak
17 Mar 24         `* Re: ? ? ?9Maciej Wozniak
18 Mar 24          `* Re: ? ? ?8Thomas Heger
18 Mar 24           +* Re: ? ? ?4Maciej Wozniak
20 Mar 24           i`* Re: ? ? ?3Thomas Heger
21 Mar 24           i +- Re: ? ? ?1Elijah Katzuba Bakiev
23 Mar 24           i `- Re: ? ? ?1Zozrov Bakinov Mikhalev
19 Mar 24           `* Re: ? ? ?3Maciej Wozniak
19 Mar 24            `* Re: ? ? ?2Maciej Wozniak
20 Mar 24             `- Re: ? ? ?1Maciej Wozniak

Haut de la page

Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.

NewsPortal