Motion is Relative to the Universe but Inertia is not
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Scientific Paper | |
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Title | Motion is Relative to the Universe but Inertia is not |
Read in full | Link to paper |
Author(s) | Thierry De Mees |
Keywords | Coriolis Gravity Theory, inertia, motion |
Published | 2011 |
Journal | General Science Journal |
No. of pages | 2 |
Read the full paper here
Abstract
Based upon the Gravito-Magnetic Theory it is clear that motion can be defined very precisely: the presence and the amplitude of the (gravito)-magnetic component at some place is the very proof of relative motion of an object. Hence, each motion cannot but being relative to the rest of our Universe. On the other hand, inertia can be proven to be not relative to the rest of our Universe, by deduction from the elementary process of force generation, which is found in the Coriolis Gravity Theory, which theory is a fundamental theory of forces and which is entirely compatible with the Gravito-Magnetic Theory. This proves that Mach's Principle (Mach's conjecture) is absurd.