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New Theories / Re: Jano's relativity denials
« Last post by Jaaanosik on Today at 01:21:01 »The two-way speed of light is good enough to detect anisotropy.Isotropy is established by definition. There is no experiment to prove it.
The two-way speed of light is good enough to detect anisotropy.Isotropy is established by definition. There is no experiment to prove it.
Yes, it can be much less. If your ship is fast enough, you could age 1 year and you find that 200 years has passed on Earth when you get back.
But you can dissociate H2 into 2H https://www.europhysicsnews.org/articles/epn/pdf/1980/05/epn19801105p9.pdf, and whilst the gas has some interesting properties, the atoms don't collapse.Perhaps they are stable due to interaction with the hydrogen stabilization cell used in the experiment.
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https://rdcu.be/cWPfD
I recommend the Wikipedia entry for the Hafele-Keating experiment, which explains the corrections required for an earth-based observer.
The Hafele?Keating experiment was a test of the theory of relativity. In 1971,[1] Joseph C. Hafele, a physicist, and Richard E. Keating, an astronomer, took four caesium-beam atomic clocks aboard commercial airliners. They flew twice around the world, first eastward, then westward, and compared the clocks in motion to stationary clocks at the United States Naval Observatory. When reunited, the three sets of clocks were found to disagree with one another, and their differences were consistent with the predictions of special and general relativity.Do you think solution of twin paradox requires general relativity?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hafele%E2%80%93Keating_experiment