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In the ancient past, calendars were indeed derived from astronomical motions as you suggest, days from the Earth's rotation, months from the moons orbit, and years from the Earth's orbit. However we no longer define time that way.
Originally posted by spy66
According to my knowledge. The infinite is stationary. It doesn't move. Light is a energy that is expanding at a set speed. If it is expanding at a set speed it ca not be infinite.
There is one more thing that amuses me. You two think that if you travel at a set speed . You would see millions of years passing by every second?
How could you do that, if years are determined by earths rotations around the sun and not by your speed and direction?
The time needed for a cesium-133 atom to perform 9,192,631,770 complete oscillations.
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
In the ancient past, calendars were indeed derived from astronomical motions as you suggest, days from the Earth's rotation, months from the moons orbit, and years from the Earth's orbit. However we no longer define time that way.
Originally posted by spy66
According to my knowledge. The infinite is stationary. It doesn't move. Light is a energy that is expanding at a set speed. If it is expanding at a set speed it ca not be infinite.
There is one more thing that amuses me. You two think that if you travel at a set speed . You would see millions of years passing by every second?
How could you do that, if years are determined by earths rotations around the sun and not by your speed and direction?
One second is now defined as:
www.thefreedictionary.com...
The time needed for a cesium-133 atom to perform 9,192,631,770 complete oscillations.
So the seconds, days months, and years on Earth will pass normally, with that many cesium-133 oscillations per second.
The astronaut traveling at .999999 the speed of light also measures one second as 9 ,192,631,770 complete oscillations of Cesium-133, but NOT the Cesium-133 on Earth, the Cesium-133 on his spaceship. So that's how he can measure one year according to his spaceship clock and see 707 years go by on Earth, as you say.
I don't know of much in the universe that's truly "stationary", it seems like just about everything we see is moving relative to something else, based on our measurements of Doppler shift of starlight. The earth zips around the sun, the sun rotates around the milky way, and the milky way is moving through space on a collision course with the Andromeda galaxy.
However you have a point that not all energy radiating from a source will truly be eternal energy, much of it will eventually strike an object ( like the mirror of one of our telescopes) and be absorbed. But even then, neither matter nor energy is truly created or destroyed, merely converted from one form to another, so in the E=mc^2 sense, I guess you could say it's eternal.
edit on 11-10-2010 by Arbitrageur because: fix typo
It doesn't matter if you are just looking at speed, c is the same inside and outside the craft, it's constant in all reference frames.
Originally posted by spy66
My question is. Which c do i use. The c outside to craft or the one inside the craft or doesn't it really matter?
Diagram 1. A source of light waves moving to the right with velocity 0.7c. The frequency is higher on the right, and lower on the left.
Light travels at the same speed everywhere, inside the ship and outside the ship and everywhere else.
Originally posted by spy66
Does light travel at the same speed "inside" the craft as the light traveling outside it?
No.
EDIT to add: If the craft is traveling at .999999 the speed of light. Does the light inside the ship travel 300 000km/second faster than the ship?
Originally posted by spy66
reply to post by Arbitrageur
But you are not answering my question.
Does light travel at the same speed "inside" the craft as the light traveling outside it?
If the craft is moving at .999999 the speed of light. What speed does light have inside the craft compared to the light traveling outside the craft?
EDIT to add: If the craft is traveling at .999999 the speed of light. Does the light inside the ship travel 300 000km/second faster than the ship?
You do have a light source inside the ship to monitor the atomic clock.
There are two light sources one outside the ship and one inside. The one inside the ship is monitoring the clock. The other is a reference to the ships speed.edit on 27.06.08 by spy66 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by docpoco
Originally posted by spy66
reply to post by Arbitrageur
But you are not answering my question.
Does light travel at the same speed "inside" the craft as the light traveling outside it?
If the craft is moving at .999999 the speed of light. What speed does light have inside the craft compared to the light traveling outside the craft?
EDIT to add: If the craft is traveling at .999999 the speed of light. Does the light inside the ship travel 300 000km/second faster than the ship?
You do have a light source inside the ship to monitor the atomic clock.
There are two light sources one outside the ship and one inside. The one inside the ship is monitoring the clock. The other is a reference to the ships speed.edit on 27.06.08 by spy66 because: (no reason given)
Yes he did. C is constant. Its relative depending on your frame of reference.
This is what you don't seem to understand. You are not thinking outside the box.
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
Light travels at the same speed everywhere, inside the ship and outside the ship and everywhere else.
Originally posted by spy66
Does light travel at the same speed "inside" the craft as the light traveling outside it?
For the third time, NO!!!
Originally posted by spy66
Ok. So the light would be traveling faster inside the ship than the light is traveling outside the ship. Since light travels c everywhere?
The ship travels .999999 the speed of light. So the light would travel 300 000 km/s faster than the ship?
It would have to do that if C is the same everywhere.
No, the angle has no effect at all on speed, only frequency, wavelength, and color, three different terms relating to the same aspect of light. See the color shifting illustration I posted above.
Originally posted by spy66
Because, that all depends on the angle your space ship is traveling compared to the direction of light.
I agree if the angle is different the angle is different, not that the velocity (or speed) is different.
Originally posted by spy66
The light inside this ship would at that angle have a different speed and angle compared to the lights heading out side the ship. Don't you agree?
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
I agree if the angle is different the angle is different, not that the velocity (or speed) is different.
Originally posted by spy66
The light inside this ship would at that angle have a different speed and angle compared to the lights heading out side the ship. Don't you agree?
The angle determines the color (or doppler shift) of the light, not the speed.
Originally posted by spy66
Ok we have finally agreed that angles play a role in all this. We also agree that light speed is light speed.
Starting with the last question first, the "heading" doesn't really affect the velocity of light, just the doppler shift, or color. The relative velocities between the two reference frames is what affects the clocks. In your illustration, let's say one reference frame is the sun, the other is the spaceship.If you have the same relative velocities in different headings, the only difference you'll measure in light from the sun is the color, not the speed. The clocks likewise aren't affected by the heading, in general, if the headings all pass the sun at an equal distance from the sun but in different directions. If you choose a heading that takes you closer to the sun, that will affect the clock because the sun's gravity will slow the clock down more the closer you get to the sun, but that's only about distance from the sun and not really about heading.
Now i want you to tell me at what angle would you determine correct time. If you where to measure the time on the atomic clock. If you travel at the angle my model shows. Or doesn't it matter at what angle you measure time compared to the ships heading?
Does energy expansion and heading matter when calculating correct time?
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
The speed c is the same in all directions though, only the frequency (or wavelength) varies.
For me, understanding this Doppler shift was one of the keys to understanding relativity.
edit on 11-10-2010 by Arbitrageur because: fix typo