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QuoteLet's drop the ball (or accelerate the planet) from 10 meters. Now the planet hits the ball and stops movingAs you said, you're teasing. You know this is nonsense.
Let's drop the ball (or accelerate the planet) from 10 meters. Now the planet hits the ball and stops moving
Think. What have you fastened the light beam equipment to?
lets say you use sunlight as your light source, passing through a pinhole into the room/lab, streaming across the mid point would that not discriminate the points under discussion ?
Quote from: gem on 05/07/2021 01:18:13lets say you use sunlight as your light source, passing through a pinhole into the room/lab, streaming across the mid point would that not discriminate the points under discussion ?The pinhole is fixed to a wall which is fixed to the floor and so they move together, see explanation by @Janus
Given the walls will have thickness. It would be like trying to line up the light source through 2 pinholes.
Hi all,So if we use Harri's example of a light beam passing through the experiment and also factor in Colin's point QuoteThink. What have you fastened the light beam equipment to?lets say you use sunlight as your light source, passing through a pinhole into the room/lab, streaming across the mid point would that not discriminate the points under discussion ?
Quote from: gem on 05/07/2021 09:14:08Given the walls will have thickness. It would be like trying to line up the light source through 2 pinholes.is that a problem?
you would expect the line of sunlight to accelerate down the tube at 9.81 m^-2 if you postulate only the earth is accelerating.
Hi.Quote from: gem on 06/07/2021 00:23:20you would expect the line of sunlight to accelerate down the tube at 9.81 m^-2 if you postulate only the earth is accelerating. It does. However one photon (one bit of light) is travelling with horizontal velocity ~ c. It's only in the tube for a tiny fraction of a second. The Earth and the floor of the tube hasn't had much time to move up toward that photon.
Ok just to clarify are you therefore stating, the beam of sunlight will reach the bottom of the tube before the ball and the feather, which is dropped from the top of the tube ?
Also If what you and others are postulating here was correct you would be able to increase the sunset time at lets say; latitude London. By approximately 25 seconds just by dropping an object from 10m above sea level.
Quote from: gem on 07/07/2021 01:05:20Also If what you and others are postulating here was correct you would be able to increase the sunset time at lets say; latitude London. By approximately 25 seconds just by dropping an object from 10m above sea level. I don’t understand how you reach that conclusion Yes indeed as you say “???”
Hi all,Morning ColinSoQuote from: Colin2B on 07/07/2021 08:05:55Quote from: gem on 07/07/2021 01:05:20Also If what you and others are postulating here was correct you would be able to increase the sunset time at lets say; latitude London. By approximately 25 seconds just by dropping an object from 10m above sea level. I don’t understand how you reach that conclusion Yes indeed as you say “???”If it’s postulated that the surface of the earth accelerates up to meet the ball and feather then if you did this at a sea shore or a large body of water from a height of 10 m just as the sun dropped below the horizon, and the earth really did lift, then it would bring part of the sun back into view.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=6jjQ0_MPSLY
The surface of the earth is always accelerating upward at 1g.
Quote from: gem on 07/07/2021 09:03:28Hi all,Morning ColinSoQuote from: Colin2B on 07/07/2021 08:05:55Quote from: gem on 07/07/2021 01:05:20Also If what you and others are postulating here was correct you would be able to increase the sunset time at lets say; latitude London. By approximately 25 seconds just by dropping an object from 10m above sea level. I don’t understand how you reach that conclusion Yes indeed as you say “???”If it’s postulated that the surface of the earth accelerates up to meet the ball and feather then if you did this at a sea shore or a large body of water from a height of 10 m just as the sun dropped below the horizon, and the earth really did lift, then it would bring part of the sun back into view.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=6jjQ0_MPSLYThe Sun is 149.6 million km away. A change of 10 meters in your viewing position would only result in an angular shift of 0.00001378 seconds of arc. That's magnitudes less than even the angular resolution of the Hubble telescope. As a comparison, a 1 meter high wave on the horizon would subtend 68 seconds of arc from your viewpoint. In other words, waves on the ocean would make the edge of the Sun appear and disappear by a far greater amount than the Earth shifting 10 m.
Hi.@gem The surface of the earth is always accelerating upward at 1g. It does this whether you drop the ball and the feather or not. Whatever effect is happening to the suns rays due to this acceleration of the earth's surface, it doesn't happen more (or less) just by dropping objects from 10m above the earth's surface. Nice picture of a sunset by the way, thanks for including that.Best wishes to you.
If the surface of the earth is always accelerating up at 1 gThen what’s it’s velocity ?
If you state it accelerates upwards to the objects it must have a change in velocity, if it’s not detected then your in the realms of flat earth argument,
In the theory of general relativity, the equivalence principle is the equivalence of gravitational and inertial mass, and Albert Einstein's observation that the gravitational "force" as experienced locally while standing on a massive body (such as the Earth) is the same as the pseudo-force experienced by an observer in a non-inertial (accelerated) frame of reference.