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It doesn't repeat.It has no repetition.Since it happens once, and never again, it does not happen more than once.
The cosine wave and the sine wave are both easy to do a FT analysis on. Each has exactly one frequency component, and it's the same.
Geezer,you say "During IFD the angular velocity was not uniform. It increased a bit, then it slowed back down so that the daily cycle time was reduced and that resulted in a phase shift of the Earth's rotational cycle relative to our atomic clock "day" (pretty hard to argue with that)."Yes, the earth had an off day in terms of timekeeping.But only one bad day in the whole of forever. On average, it didn't happen.
Did someone say that the Earth is a closed system? Does that exclude, Light, gravity, cosmic rays, dark matter, asteroids, meteors, comets and UFOs? Not to mention interplanetary dust. In the cosmic context I do not think earth is a closed system, if it was we could not exist as the dinosaurs would still be running about.. []
Geezer, I'm averaging over an infinite past history. (which is one such simplifying assumption).
If it only happens once, you can chalk it up to observational error and ignore it, right?
Ok, I just came up with this argument that seems to prove by contradiction that "fart day" generates extra frequencies (via the Fourier transform). Let me know what you think.First, you need to know that the Fourier transform has an inverse. From a signal over time, you can uniquely get the frequency spectrum of that signal, and from a frequency spectrum you can uniquely recover the signal over time. Second, if the earth rotated unimpeded by farting cows, you could model it by a periodic sinusoid, s(t). Maybe this sinusoid starts and stops and maybe it goes off to infinity. It doesn't matter. It generates a frequency spectrum, say S(f). You can go back and forth from S(f) to s(t) by Fourier transforms and inverse Fourier transforms. I could just as easily have told you that the frequency spectrum is S(f) and you could have recovered the signal over time, s(t). There is no loss of information in the Fourier transform.Let's assume BC is right and that the frequency spectrum with the cows farting is the same as without. If that's the case, then it's also given by S(f). By the properties of the Fourier transform, a frequency spectrum S(f) means that the earth's rotation is given by s(t), which we know is true from above.But this is identical to the signal without the cows farting, and we know the signals cannot be identical (there's a phase shift). So the frequency spectra cannot be identical.QED?
To take a simple example the signal function (sin qt + sin 2qt) has precisely the same frequency spectrum as (sin qt + cos 2qt) -- equal spikes at f = q and f = 2q -- but they are quite different functions.
I do think it has problems representing an instantaneous phase change in a sine wave, for example, but this isn't physical.