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Author Topic:   Misconceptions in Relativity
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 83 of 141 (516292)
07-24-2009 1:44 PM
Reply to: Message 30 by cavediver
05-17-2009 3:30 PM


quote:
I'm sure you're aware from SR that we have time dilation and length contraction. These are purely observational effects, resulting from observing 4d space-time from a 3d perspective.
Actually they are not obervational facts. They are interpretations of observational facts. The time dilation effect that has been observed can be explained as clock's mechanism slowing down.
quote:
Assuming a model of aether non-entrained by the motion of celestial bodies, one can provide a rational explanation of the experimental processes affecting the measurement of time when clocks are in motion. Contrary to special relativity, aether theory does not assume that the time itself is affected by motion; the reading displayed by the moving clocks results from two facts: 1/ Due to their movement through the aether, they tick at a slower rate than in the aether frame. 2/ The usual synchronization procedures generate a synchronism discrepancy effect. These facts give rise to an alteration of the measurement of time which, as we shall show, exactly explains the experimental results.
http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0611077
And the lenght contraction has actually never been observed.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 30 by cavediver, posted 05-17-2009 3:30 PM cavediver has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 84 by cavediver, posted 07-25-2009 11:24 AM Smooth Operator has replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 85 of 141 (516488)
07-25-2009 2:48 PM
Reply to: Message 84 by cavediver
07-25-2009 11:24 AM


quote:
And there we have it - abject stupidity, parading as science. Since when is science advanced by claims of "defies logic and cannot be rationally explained"
So you basicly don't have an argument, fine... It would been easier if you said it like that.
Let me explain something to you. The first thing in science is that something has to be logicals to be correct. If it is not logical, than it is not correct. So if you have a theory that says, for an example let's say, that an object can go in two different directions in same time, you have an illogical theory, which is wrong.
So SR fail the first test to be a real scientific theory.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 84 by cavediver, posted 07-25-2009 11:24 AM cavediver has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 86 by cavediver, posted 07-25-2009 2:59 PM Smooth Operator has replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 87 of 141 (516494)
07-25-2009 3:06 PM
Reply to: Message 86 by cavediver
07-25-2009 2:59 PM


quote:
I don't have an argument because there is nothing to argue. The symmetry of time dilation in S.R. is not paradoxical, it is bloody obvious if you have the first clue about the theory. The reason the Twins' Paradox is so-called, is because the ASYMMETRY is (incorrectly) regarded as paradoxical. Not appreciating this, yet thinking that one can write a critique of S.R. just makes one an idiot and a laughing-stock...
The point was not even the Twin Paradox. You obviously don't know what I'm talking about.
I was trying to explain to you, that time dilation was not actually observed and that it can be explained by clock's mechanism slowing down, and not the time itself slowing down.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 86 by cavediver, posted 07-25-2009 2:59 PM cavediver has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 88 by cavediver, posted 07-25-2009 3:12 PM Smooth Operator has replied
 Message 90 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-25-2009 4:30 PM Smooth Operator has replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 89 of 141 (516497)
07-25-2009 3:20 PM
Reply to: Message 88 by cavediver
07-25-2009 3:12 PM


[/quote]the cluelessness is strong with this one[/quote]Why don't you ask your mom how strong it is?
quote:
I know
No, you don't know. If you did you wouldn't go off topic.
quote:
- but that doesn't change the obvious facts that,
Yes it does, since it explains why you are switching topics.
quote:
1) you are completely wrong,
Explain why.
quote:
2) you are so out of your depth, that you have no clue as to the fact you are wrong.
Explain why?
quote:
Tell me, when the physicist-engineers designed the LHC, did they use the mathematics of Special Relativty, or your bullshit?
When your mom screems, does she think of you or, me at night?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 88 by cavediver, posted 07-25-2009 3:12 PM cavediver has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 91 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-25-2009 4:32 PM Smooth Operator has replied
 Message 92 by cavediver, posted 07-25-2009 5:58 PM Smooth Operator has replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 95 of 141 (516531)
07-25-2009 10:33 PM
Reply to: Message 90 by DevilsAdvocate
07-25-2009 4:30 PM


quote:
Without the time dilation phenomena as described in SR, the GPS navigation and locating services would be an impossibility. It is only by taking time dialation into effect that we can achieve accurate localization using the global positionitioning satellite system in all types of navigational applications from the military to the Tom Tom in your SUV.
This is obviously not true. What actually is being used in the GPS navigation is the Sagnac Effect.
Sagnac effect - Wikipedia
quote:
The aether hypothesis has been dead for over 100 years. Only crackpots and nutcases continue to breath life into this idea.
Not so, Einsten himslef said that Relativity can not work without the aether.
quote:
... with the new theory of electrodynamics we are rather forced to have an aether.
Dirac sea - Wikipedia
I'm sorry but it seem you are the nutcase throwback who is living 100 years in the past.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 90 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-25-2009 4:30 PM DevilsAdvocate has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 99 by lyx2no, posted 07-25-2009 10:53 PM Smooth Operator has replied
 Message 105 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-26-2009 1:15 AM Smooth Operator has replied
 Message 108 by cavediver, posted 07-26-2009 4:03 AM Smooth Operator has replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 96 of 141 (516532)
07-25-2009 10:34 PM
Reply to: Message 91 by DevilsAdvocate
07-25-2009 4:32 PM


quote:
Wow, that is so mature. Get out of the basement, go to college and learn what real science is all about.
Excuse me, but he was the one who was rude to me first. So why should I not give him back what he deserves?
quote:
BTW, Split, Croatia was one of my favorite ports to visit. Beautiful city.
Thanks!

This message is a reply to:
 Message 91 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-25-2009 4:32 PM DevilsAdvocate has not replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 97 of 141 (516533)
07-25-2009 10:36 PM
Reply to: Message 92 by cavediver
07-25-2009 5:58 PM


quote:
FFS, if you're going to insult, please at least try to make sense...
You made even less sense when you insulted me...
quote:
Why? You have no interest in learning. I only teach those that actually show a desire to learn. You're far more happy trying to tell a scientist, whose field happens to be Relativity, that he knows nothing about Relativity. And that's quite funny...
There is nothing to teach in Relativity since it is one big logical fallacy.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 92 by cavediver, posted 07-25-2009 5:58 PM cavediver has not replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 98 of 141 (516535)
07-25-2009 10:39 PM
Reply to: Message 93 by Son Goku
07-25-2009 9:10 PM


Re: Time dilation
quote:
Smooth Operator, it is unrealistic to think that time dilation is due to some slowing down of a clock's internal mechanisms.
Why? Is it unrealistic to say that when you move your hand through water that it is you hand that is slowing down, and not the time? If you move your hand through the air with the same force it will go faster. Does that mean that time is going faster?
quote:
There is time dilation due to relative motion and gravitational time dilation, both of these produce different effects so they could not really come from the same clock based mechanism.
Couldn't gravity actually be effecting the clock's mechanism?
quote:
Also think of particles which have been observed to have their time dilate. They are too simple to have internal workings which could slow down.
Again, maybe the particels themselves are slowed down, and not the time. How do you know it's time itslef?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 93 by Son Goku, posted 07-25-2009 9:10 PM Son Goku has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 104 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-26-2009 1:02 AM Smooth Operator has not replied
 Message 106 by Rrhain, posted 07-26-2009 1:19 AM Smooth Operator has replied
 Message 110 by Son Goku, posted 07-26-2009 5:58 AM Smooth Operator has replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 100 of 141 (516540)
07-25-2009 11:25 PM
Reply to: Message 99 by lyx2no
07-25-2009 10:53 PM


Re: There Can Be Only One
quote:
Did all the other effects that GPS have to take into account battle it out until there was only one? Are each man's thoughts and dreams the Sagnac Effects to know? (Sci-fi culture reference.)
GPS takes into account both the quickening (SR) and the slowing (GR) of time. Awfully strange that relativity gives the correct answers to both in part per billion if it's wrong. Lucky guess?
There are no Relativistic effects GPS has to take account of. They actually take geocentric ECEF frame of reference to measure time.
Earth-centered, Earth-fixed coordinate system - Wikipedia

This message is a reply to:
 Message 99 by lyx2no, posted 07-25-2009 10:53 PM lyx2no has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 101 by lyx2no, posted 07-26-2009 12:02 AM Smooth Operator has replied
 Message 102 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-26-2009 12:49 AM Smooth Operator has replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 112 of 141 (516565)
07-26-2009 8:29 AM
Reply to: Message 101 by lyx2no
07-26-2009 12:02 AM


Re: There Can Be Only One
quote:
If there are no relativistic effect why do we only get the right answers when we pretend they do? Do the system operators refer to a mathacaid pay schedule and see that they will make more money if they make Lorentz transformations?
Nope, since they don't use it.
quote:
Where is the T axis?
Obviously doesn't need one!

This message is a reply to:
 Message 101 by lyx2no, posted 07-26-2009 12:02 AM lyx2no has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 123 by lyx2no, posted 07-26-2009 9:56 AM Smooth Operator has not replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 113 of 141 (516569)
07-26-2009 8:42 AM
Reply to: Message 102 by DevilsAdvocate
07-26-2009 12:49 AM


Re: There Can Be Only One
quote:
You really need to stop googling and wiking shit that you have no clue what you are talking about.
Oh, we'll soon enough see who knows what he's talking about. I promise you that.
quote:
The ECEF is the frame of reference used to determine x, y, z positioning. In fact, ECEF relies on taking into effect relativistic time-dilation in order for the satellites to determine precise positioning data as shown here
That is not mentioned anywhere.
quote:
The Sagnac effect has an important influence on the system. Since most GPS users are at rest or nearly so on earth's surface, it would be highly desirable to synchronize clocks in a rotating frame fixed to the earth (an Earth-Fixed, Earth-Centered Frame or ECEF Frame).
This is what I got from your first link. I didn't bother to check the other ones because this first one already proves me right. They are uing the Sagnac effect, and not relativistic effects. And SR can not account for the Sagnac effect.
quote:
BTW, the Sagnac effect does not negate relativistic time-dilation but rather is predicted by SR as shown below:
The Sagnac effect has nothing to do with dime dilation. Yet SR still can't account for it.
quote:
Hence no description of a Sagnac device in terms of any system of inertial coordinates can possibly entail non-isotropic light speed, nor can any such description yield physically observable results different from those derived above (which are known to agree with experiment).
You are wrong. It's is clear to me, you've never even heard of the Sagnac effect. Because that is exactly what it does. It gives you non-isotropic light speed.
quote:
Using that apparatus, you can measure the time it takes for light to make a complete turn around the Earth when light moves from West to East. Now, if you repeat the same experiment, with the same mirrors, (or even do it simultaneously), using light moving from East to West, you find that the time taken by light to move from East to West is shorter than the time taken for light to complete the revolution in the opposite direction.
The experiment shows that the speed of light depends on it's direction. Something that should not happen in SR.
F.A.Q about Experimental Tests Invalidating Einstein's Relativity
quote:
To dispute General and Special Relativity is to go against the likes of Stephen Hawking, Einstein and the rest of the scientific community.
They are meaningless nobodies.
quote:
SR has been proven not just by direct observation and experimentation but by application and not just by GPS but by other scientific applications such as the Gravity Probe A satellite launched in 1976 and the Hafele-Keating experiment, which used atomic clocks in circumnavigating aircraft to test general relativity and special relativity together
Umm... no. Those are just your false interpretations.
Edited by Smooth Operator, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 102 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-26-2009 12:49 AM DevilsAdvocate has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 125 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-26-2009 10:20 AM Smooth Operator has not replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 114 of 141 (516570)
07-26-2009 8:50 AM
Reply to: Message 105 by DevilsAdvocate
07-26-2009 1:15 AM


quote:
Actually Paul Dirac said this not Einstein.
Not the point who actually said this particular statement. The point is that he agreed with him, and he knew that he need aether for SR to have any chance.
quote:
Dirac was referring to a sea of virtual quantum particles not a true 'aether' or 'quintessence' as defined by the Greeks and later naturalists and scientists.
Um... duh!!!! Did I ever say anything about the Greek aether? No! So stop assuming. The point remains that there is a medium for electromagnetic waves that fills all space. And Dirac and Einstein knew it. And if you wan't Einstein's exact words, than here...
quote:
More careful reflection teaches us, however, that the special theory of relativity does not compel us to deny ether. We may assume the existence of an ether,; only we must give up ascribing a definite state of motion to it, i.e. we must by abstraction take from it the last mechanical characteristic which Lorentz had still left it. We shall see later that this point of view, the conceivability of which shall at once endeavour to make more intelligible by a somewhat halting comparison, is justified by the results of the general theory of relativity.
404 | TYPO3 Doku TUHH
quote:
In this respect, yes and no, in the fact that the fabric of the universe consists of a sea of quantum particles (matter) popping into and out of existence but is it a real tangible elemental substance as described by earlier theorists, no.
Wrong. It's not popping in and out of existance. It's a clear violation of 1st and 2nd law of TD. And no, it doesn't matter how small amount is supposed to be created, it's still a violation. It has never been observed, only assumed here. So the fact remains, the medium exists. Just as I said at the beginning.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 105 by DevilsAdvocate, posted 07-26-2009 1:15 AM DevilsAdvocate has not replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 115 of 141 (516572)
07-26-2009 8:56 AM
Reply to: Message 106 by Rrhain
07-26-2009 1:19 AM


quote:
Well, yes. That's the entire point. However, it is not happening the way you think.
That is, in a mechanical clock, gravity can have an effect as it pulls on the physical mechanisms, causing certains gears to press harder against each other than they would in an environment with less gravity.
But that isn't how relativistic effects are measured. No mechanical or moving parts are involved. Under the international standard, the second is defined as "the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium 133 atom." This is not affected by frame of reference. If you are in the same motion, experiencing the same acceleration and gravitic field, the amount of time is always constant for that transition.
Please look at the atomis clock. It has more mechanical parts than than the regular one. Ofcourse it can be slowed down due to aether and gravity.
http://www.marcdatabase.com/...photo-1200-scale-1024x878.jpg
quote:
So the experiment is take one atomic clock and keep it down here on the ground while you take another atomic clock and send it up in the air so that it is moving and experiences a different gravitic field.
When it comes back down, they are out of sync. But the difference cannot be accounted for by the motion of the clocks alone. Instead, the gravitational field is in play.
Yes, and that field has been acting on the clock's mechanism.
quote:
Gravity does affect the clock but not by changing the way the clock functions. It affects it by changing the way time flows.
How exactly do you know that?
quote:
One of the great paradoxes of relativity is that while you are in the changing gravitic field, you don't experience time any differently.
Maybe because it doesn't happen?
quote:
That is, one second still seems to take just as much time as it did before. The difference is only in how time flows with respect to other frames of reference. That's why when you are moving with respect to another frame of reference, you can actually watch them moving faster.
Or it is the effect of gravity and the aether?
quote:
Because the methods used to calculate time at the atomic level are not so crude as to rely on motion. Instead, it uses an atomic method that is invariant under gravity.
If you have seen an atomic clock, you'd see it's pretty crude.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 106 by Rrhain, posted 07-26-2009 1:19 AM Rrhain has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 130 by Rrhain, posted 07-26-2009 11:21 AM Smooth Operator has not replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 116 of 141 (516574)
07-26-2009 9:09 AM
Reply to: Message 108 by cavediver
07-26-2009 4:03 AM


quote:
you really are so out of your depth here. Why do you keep trying to make yourself look more and more idiotic with each post?
And why do you try to make yourself look like filthy scum every post you make?
quote:
The sagnac effect is just a consequence of a rotating frame. It is trivial. And obviously GPS has to take it into account. It's like saying that we have to take into account coriolos in undestanding the Earth's weather - true, but so fucking trivial.
The point is that that is what a GPS uses. And not some relativistic effects. And no, the Sagnac effect is not a erlativistic effect. SR can't account for it.
quote:
GPS takes into account effects from both Special Relativity and General Relativity. Saying it doesn't just makes you an idiot, not correct.
Saying that it does without any evidence makes you a pretty big moron I think.
quote:
You still haven't answered my question regarding the LHC. That is the Large Hadron Collider. It is just the latest of a long line of particle accelerators. These are designed by taking Special Relativity into account. If they do not, they do not work. Particles will not go round the accelerator. Simple. And given that the LHC'c cost is in the BILLIONS, you try to make damn well sure you design it with the right fucking mathematics.
That's because you're an idiot. LHC takes into account quantum calculations.
quote:
Son Goku mentions the most obvious example of time dilation, and you answer by saying maybe the particles are slowing down What the hell is that supposed to explain?
If you can't read plain English than get the hell out.
quote:
Relativistic muons live many times longer than non-relativistic muons (confirmed by muons generated by cosmic ray collisons in the atmosphere, and by muons generated in accelerators.) What is your aether doing that makes them live so long?
Muons have not been proven to decay at rest.
http://arxiv.org/pdf/physics/0508071
quote:
Utter bullshit. Show me where Einstein said an aether was required...
Dirac said it, Einstein agreed with him.
quote:
This is not aether
Yes, imbecile, it is. It is a medium that fills all of space.
quote:
the writer (not Einstein) is refering to a field. And there are many of them. And the Dirac sea you mention was one of the first hints at these fields. You do understand what two theories were combined to discover these fields, don't you? Quantum Mechanics and SPECIAL RELATIVITY.
I know, they were trying to account for aether in SR. But they uterlly failed.
quote:
Dirac postulated his "sea" on the back of his RELATIVISTIC EQUATION for the electron, what we call the Dirac Equation. Yes, fields are reminiscent of the aether, but they do not form a frame of rest in any way... except one
Again, I know, they were trying to make the aether conform with SR. Yet they failed, since the Sagnac effect shows that if you pass the light through the aether you will get non-isotropic light speed. It will always be faster in one side, than the other.
quote:
The two central theories in all fundemental physics are General Relativity and Quantum Field Theory, both of which are 100% based upon Special Relativity. These also happen to be the two most successful theories ever developed by mankind.
If that were true you would give me some evidence. Which you do not have. And if they were both compatible, which they are not, we would already have a unified field equation for both, which we do not. So you are wrong.
quote:
But hey, let's follow you and throw out Special Relativity. Now, what's your prediction for the gyromagnetic ratio of the electron, and can you show me your working. Using Special Relativity, we get an answer that agrees with experiment to 12 decimal places of accuracy. Can you do better?
Math alone proves nothing.
quote:
you dare to call others here the nutcase
Why shouldn't I? Youre a nutcase too.
quote:
You are not only an idiot, but you are so pathetic that you think that jokes about my mother and incest are funny and appropriate in a discussion here.
Well you should have thought about that before you insulted me. You inbred moron.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 108 by cavediver, posted 07-26-2009 4:03 AM cavediver has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 121 by Son Goku, posted 07-26-2009 9:44 AM Smooth Operator has not replied
 Message 133 by AdminNosy, posted 07-26-2009 12:14 PM Smooth Operator has replied

  
Smooth Operator
Member (Idle past 5136 days)
Posts: 630
Joined: 07-24-2009


Message 117 of 141 (516575)
07-26-2009 9:13 AM
Reply to: Message 110 by Son Goku
07-26-2009 5:58 AM


Re: Time dilation
quote:
No, although these effects are fundamentally different to how relativistic time dilation occurs. Particularly for special relativistic time dilation where the body isn't really interacting with anything. Hopefully the examples below will help.
Oh but it is. It is interacting with gravity and the aether.
quote:
Well first of all, the particles are actually moving extremely fast with respect to us, so they aren't slowed down.
Just because they are moving really fast, doesn't mean they didn't slow down.
quote:
The point is that particles moving at huge velocities live longer from our point of view.
Now you could say maybe high speeds has a physical effect on the decay rate of a particle, however this is easy to refute using Galilean relativity, which I will assume you accept. Galilean relativity says that if you are moving inertially then you can't tell you are moving. So these incredibly fast particles in their own reference frame are stationary.
I do not accept any kind of relativity.
quote:
Since any physical effect on their decay rate would have to be real in all frames, well then the slowing down of their decay rate would be true in their own rest frame. So what about the particles which aren't moving fast with respect to us? Well they are at rest in our frame, so from the above analysis they should also have their decay rate slowed down.
However they don't, only particles moving fast with respect to us have their clocks slowed down. This refutes the possibility that the decay rate is being affected by a speed based mechanism.
But it doesn't show that time itslef is either slowing down or going faster.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 110 by Son Goku, posted 07-26-2009 5:58 AM Son Goku has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 118 by Son Goku, posted 07-26-2009 9:31 AM Smooth Operator has replied

  
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