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It makes them perpetual, but not machines because any model of an atom that invokes movement must require that movement to be essentially random. Heisenberg rules!
Where does the energy come from ?
2: Does this make atoms (et al) Perpetual Motion Machines ?
Maybe in the future, our descendants will be able to harness the power of this motion to make a perpetual machine ?
By eliminating all losses such as friction it is, in principle, possible to make a contraption that would exhibit perpetual motion. It would, however, be totally impossible to harvest any energy from this.
I am fairly sure the first law is sacrosanct and will never be broken. I can foresee the possibility of very limited cases where the second law does not hold- these will be highly contrived scenarios and I don't reckon any great usefulness will arise from these. Bottom line, I don't think future generations will find a significant way around these laws. Ewe may hold a different opinion but we won't fall out over it.
I am fairly sure the first law is sacrosanct and will never be broken.
Is it not the case that, where the source is receding from the receiver, the photon red shift equals the increase in gravitational potential of the transmitter?
Yet when we apply gravitational potential corrections, we get the right answer...
....how do current calculations of red shift match up to actual measurements for distant stars?