On Sep 10, 4:16 pm, "Dirk Van de moortel" <dirkvandemoor...@nospAm.hotmail.com> wrote: Spaceman <space...@yourclockmalfunctioned.duh> wrote in message Why are they afraid to say it will travel ~ 420360 miles. Using a lightspeed of ~186000 miles per second. :) Strich is just as afraid as anyone else (except you of course) to say that it will travel ~ 420360 miles. Dirk
strich.999@gmail.com wrote: On Sep 10, 2:38 pm, Sam Wormley <sworml...@mchsi.com> wrote: iqgoo...@gmail.com wrote: 4: In 2.26us in the earth frame, any particle with speed ~c, (such as a photon, or a muon in this case) can only travel 700m as measured in the Earth frame, and not reach the lower atmosphere. Bzzzzt! 5: Since the 2.26us in the muon
>> The sound of one hand clapping is ... a slap in the face. If a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound? Yep. As a remote microphone will verify; the production of sound is not dependent upon the presence of a receiver/listener since a recording will have the sound of the tree fall. Is the glass half empty or, half full?
On Fri, 11 Apr 2008 22:12:56 -0700, Bill Turlock <"Bill Turlock "@sonnnic.invalid> wrote: Bob Ward wrote: On Fri, 11 Apr 2008 17:50:06 -0700, Bill Turlock <"Bill Turlock "@sonnnic.invalid> wrote: "S. Checker" wrote: Snidely <Snidely.too@gmail.com> wrote: Not necessarily -- it could just be for commercial or even cellular services.
On Apr 11, 10:24�am, Darwin123 <drosen0...@yahoo.com> wrote: � � Okay, I see here that I made a mistake. The acceleration g is the almost the same in both frames. �There is a small difference in g and g' due to what I described before, but that doesn't completely explain the difference in clocks. Sorry, sorry, sorry. The problem is with simultaneity. I will assume in this post that g