Difference between revisions of "Timekeeping and the Speed of Light - New Insights from Pulsar Observations"

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==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
The pulse rates of some millisecond pulsars have long term stabilities that rival our best atomic clocks.  Furthermore, the pulsars are not affected by the dynamics of our solar system, which produce cyclic variations in earth based atomic time standards.  Measuring time in "pulsar seconds" and Einstein's "time" in uncorrected atomic seconds leads to two different measures of the speed of light, both of which have important physical interpretations that are discussed.  The evidence indicates that Einstein's definition of "time" and his principle of relativity are very useful but not universal "truths" and that Newton's ideas of time and space were discarded prmaturely.[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
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The pulse rates of some millisecond pulsars have long term stabilities that rival our best atomic clocks.  Furthermore, the pulsars are not affected by the dynamics of our solar system, which produce cyclic variations in earth based atomic time standards.  Measuring time in "pulsar seconds" and Einstein's "time" in uncorrected atomic seconds leads to two different measures of the speed of light, both of which have important physical interpretations that are discussed.  The evidence indicates that Einstein's definition of "time" and his principle of relativity are very useful but not universal "truths" and that Newton's ideas of time and space were discarded prmaturely.
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|timekeeping speed light - new insights pulsar observations]]
  
 
[[Category:Relativity]]
 
[[Category:Relativity]]

Revision as of 11:32, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title Timekeeping and the Speed of Light - New Insights from Pulsar Observations
Read in full Link to paper
Author(s) Charles M Hill
Keywords atomic clocks, pulsar seconds, speed, relativity
Published 1995
Journal Galilean Electrodynamics
Volume 6
Number 1
No. of pages 8
Pages 3-10

Read the full paper here

Abstract

The pulse rates of some millisecond pulsars have long term stabilities that rival our best atomic clocks.  Furthermore, the pulsars are not affected by the dynamics of our solar system, which produce cyclic variations in earth based atomic time standards.  Measuring time in "pulsar seconds" and Einstein's "time" in uncorrected atomic seconds leads to two different measures of the speed of light, both of which have important physical interpretations that are discussed.  The evidence indicates that Einstein's definition of "time" and his principle of relativity are very useful but not universal "truths" and that Newton's ideas of time and space were discarded prmaturely.