Difference between revisions of "Circular Motion, Gravitational Potential, and Clocks"

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<b>Why the Effect of Circular Motion and Gravitational Potential on Clock Rate Contradicts the Relativity Principle (Time Odyssey II)</b>  One million years ago, noon last Sunday, five droids were given the chance of receiving immortality and supreme power over the universe. The droids, which were switched on simultaneously, were commanded to race each other to the age of one million years. One droid chose to position himself at the North Pole. Another droid chose to position himself beyond the orbit of the moon. A third droid chose to position himself outside the orbit of Pluto. The fourth droid chose to position himself outside the rim of the Milky Way galaxy. The fifth droid chose to position himself outside the local group, and at rest with respect to the frame defined by the Cosmic Background Radiation. The paper explains why the fifth droid won the contest, and why his  victory falsifies all naked ape science since Galileo.
 
<b>Why the Effect of Circular Motion and Gravitational Potential on Clock Rate Contradicts the Relativity Principle (Time Odyssey II)</b>  One million years ago, noon last Sunday, five droids were given the chance of receiving immortality and supreme power over the universe. The droids, which were switched on simultaneously, were commanded to race each other to the age of one million years. One droid chose to position himself at the North Pole. Another droid chose to position himself beyond the orbit of the moon. A third droid chose to position himself outside the orbit of Pluto. The fourth droid chose to position himself outside the rim of the Milky Way galaxy. The fifth droid chose to position himself outside the local group, and at rest with respect to the frame defined by the Cosmic Background Radiation. The paper explains why the fifth droid won the contest, and why his  victory falsifies all naked ape science since Galileo.
  
[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|circular motion gravitational potential clocks]]
  
[[Category:Relativity]]
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[[Category:Relativity|circular motion gravitational potential clocks]]

Latest revision as of 19:23, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title Circular Motion, Gravitational Potential, and Clocks
Author(s) Jim Hodges
Keywords Circular Motion, Gravitational Potential, Clocks, Time, Gravity
Published 2000
Journal None

Abstract

Why the Effect of Circular Motion and Gravitational Potential on Clock Rate Contradicts the Relativity Principle (Time Odyssey II) One million years ago, noon last Sunday, five droids were given the chance of receiving immortality and supreme power over the universe. The droids, which were switched on simultaneously, were commanded to race each other to the age of one million years. One droid chose to position himself at the North Pole. Another droid chose to position himself beyond the orbit of the moon. A third droid chose to position himself outside the orbit of Pluto. The fourth droid chose to position himself outside the rim of the Milky Way galaxy. The fifth droid chose to position himself outside the local group, and at rest with respect to the frame defined by the Cosmic Background Radiation. The paper explains why the fifth droid won the contest, and why his victory falsifies all naked ape science since Galileo.