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| From | Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | sci.math, sci.physics, sci.physics.relativity |
| Subject | Re: Sync two clocks |
| Date | 2024-08-23 08:37 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <liqp0jFr49eU6@mid.individual.net> (permalink) |
| References | (7 earlier) <DBY62RW1eKeJ1CBElubh-FukMnE@jntp> <va5cd7$3vdmg$1@dont-email.me> <lio63qFf36mU7@mid.individual.net> <va76co$blq6$8@dont-email.me> <va8cgu$j6el$1@dont-email.me> |
Cross-posted to 3 groups.
Am Freitag000023, 23.08.2024 um 00:02 schrieb Yonny Bukowski: > Python wrote: > >> Le 22/08/2024 à 09:02, Thomas Heger a écrit : >>> You introduced t_d or 'transit time' (aka 'delay'), while Einstein >>> didn't use any of these terms. >> >> But he write down two equations that implies directly that a delay is >> taken into account. > > then you don't understand physics. That's exactly NOT a delay in > relativity, which is all about NOT having delays, exactly. This uneducated > troll don't know what a delay is. > 'Delay' is a VERY common phenomenon. E.g. if you use satellites for phone-calls, the long distance from ground station A to satellite and from there to ground station B causes audible delays. All sorts of other devices or situations are also influenced by the finite speed of light, too. It is simply everywhere and all around us! TH
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Re: Sync two clocks Yonny Bukowski <skyo@yobnwkyy.pl> - 2024-08-22 22:02 +0000 Re: Sync two clocks Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> - 2024-08-23 08:37 +0200
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