Stripe said:
Why have you decided to start talking to me again?
5 days off stripe was sufficient recovery time.
Stripe said:
For every case we are capable of making adjustments to account for those changes in degree of effect.
Exactly. For each individual clock, a unique correction factor must be used because each clock is affected differently (even when they are subject to the same changing variable). This is not the case with relativity. Every clock is affected to the same degree.
Johnny said:
Then what is affecting clocks uniformly at a given velocity?
Stripe said:
Gravity has nothing to do with special relativity (to which I am clearly referring). The effect is still present even when gravity is accounted for, or in zero gravity situations.
Johnny said:
In other words, an atomic clock and a decay-based clock will be affected to the exact same degree, despite the fact they rely on completely different mechanisms for keeping time. Do you have an explanation as to what's going on here?
Stripe said:
Really? Do you have the numbers on that?
Or are the two clocks simply adjusted according to their own variation.
Two different clocks will experience the exact same time dilating effects under the same conditions, regardless of their mechanism of action of the clocks. The lorentz transformation describes the degree in which all clocks will measure time at a given velocity, not just atomic clocks. This is demonstrated by the numerous studies calculating muon decay, pion lifetimes, kaon lifetimes, atomic resonance frequencies, as well as a number of other techniques which, despite the varying mechanism for keeping time, all show the changes in time plotted along the same lortenz curve. In other words, at the same velocities, two clocks operating by different mechanisms demonstrate the exact same change in time. This is in contrast to the clock examples you provided earlier, which are all simply reduced to a physical force acting on a mechanical clock thereby decreasing its accuracy.
Johnny said:
And one final question for you: Is the speed of light constant regardless of your velocity?
Stripe said:
I don't know. Relativity says that it is, but if relativity is another word for timekeeping error then perhaps not.
The invariance of the speed of light is a postulate on which special relativity rests, it isn't a product of special relativity. And anyways, isn't that something we can measure? We can find luminous objects in space we are moving away from at extremely high velocities. Why not just measure the speed of light incoming from those objects? And given modern technologies, can't we measure changes in the speed of light in the lab?
Do you think you think generations of brilliant physicists have neglected to consider your objections?