From: ben6993 on
On May 1, 9:16 am, "Androcles" <Headmas...(a)Hogwarts.physics_z> wrote:
> "ben6993" <ben6...(a)hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:29b72afc-f466-4e77-9642-cd5065827e05(a)n15g2000yqf.googlegroups.com...
> On May 1, 8:26 am, ben6993 <ben6...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On May 1, 5:13 am, John Murphy
>
> > <london.accommodation.homest...(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
> > > On 1 May, 03:08, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > > > If the train watches the stations clock go slow then when does it have
> > > > the time to age more?
>
> > > > Mitch Raemsch
>
> > > It never gets a chance to age comparatively, because by definition
> > > neither 'clock' - nor the train, nor the station knows what the other
> > > is doing, but it would not help if the train were to visit the station
> > > in some metrical sense, since that would entail either time gained by
> > > the train or lost by the station and nor would it work the other way
> > > around since it would seem to neither 'clock' that they had lost or
> > > gained.
>
> > > All the same, demons are thought to be able to travel at light speed,
> > > so could in principle produce a twin-dial clock, available to both
> > > station and train, although it is unclear how that could be of help to
> > > anyone other than demons themselves unless they could become an
> > > interstellar ISP. And if they got a useful role, they might get free
> > > from messing things up and win a few prizes here and there.
> > > --
> > > Harbinger.
>
> > Is light speed fast enough for the demons to be able to do that job?
> > Wouldn't they need to travel instantaneously, without any time
> > elapsing on their own clock or on anyone else's clock, to the station
> > and back so they could adjust the auxiliary time dial? And they would
> > need to return very frequently, to keep resetting the time on the
> > auxiliary dial to the quasi-absolute time.
>
> > If the demons were to pick a speeding clock, with respect to the
> > station, for use as the quasi-absolute time, then the auxiliary dial
> > would lag behind the station clock. If the auxiliary clock were to
> > run very slow then we would need to display milliseconds or
> > microseconds to see any useful passage of quasi-absolute time.
>
> > Taking more and more decimal places of seconds to be useful for slower
> > and slower clocks, at the limit of Planck time, assuming time is
> > quantised, the auxiliary dial might in this limit not be able to show
> > any passsage of time useful to us. That is because one unit of Planck
> > time cannot be subdivided on the auxiliary dial. What use is a dial
> > with only one tick every hundred years, say? Just as well the clocks
> > will also have the local-time dial.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
>
> Post script.   Oops.  It's much too early in the morning here to think
> straight ... not that it will be any better later on ... my logic
> about moving clock times is probably wrong.  But let the demon instead
> take quasi-absolute clocks nearer and nearer to a black hole to get
> the effect of slower and slower ticking of time to be applied to the
> station clocks.
>
> =============================================
> Take the train to the black hole... you are right, it must be much too early
> in the morning there.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

A black hole just outside Deansgate station could maybe explain all
that wasted time on local trains there waiting for the signal to go.

I wrote my PS before seeing your post. I had assumed that the demon,
travelling instantaneously and therefore magically, was able to know
the time on all the clocks when stationary with respect to them. But
I realised that I was presuming that the demon's stationary clock
would run slower that the station's stationary clock, when I knew only
that the demon's moving clock appeared, from an observer at the
station, to run slower than the stationary station clock.
From: Androcles on

"ben6993" <ben6993(a)hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:687bc182-c130-495c-be1e-d665fd165373(a)d39g2000yqa.googlegroups.com...
On May 1, 9:16 am, "Androcles" <Headmas...(a)Hogwarts.physics_z> wrote:
> "ben6993" <ben6...(a)hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:29b72afc-f466-4e77-9642-cd5065827e05(a)n15g2000yqf.googlegroups.com...
> On May 1, 8:26 am, ben6993 <ben6...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On May 1, 5:13 am, John Murphy
>
> > <london.accommodation.homest...(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
> > > On 1 May, 03:08, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > > > If the train watches the stations clock go slow then when does it
> > > > have
> > > > the time to age more?
>
> > > > Mitch Raemsch
>
> > > It never gets a chance to age comparatively, because by definition
> > > neither 'clock' - nor the train, nor the station knows what the other
> > > is doing, but it would not help if the train were to visit the station
> > > in some metrical sense, since that would entail either time gained by
> > > the train or lost by the station and nor would it work the other way
> > > around since it would seem to neither 'clock' that they had lost or
> > > gained.
>
> > > All the same, demons are thought to be able to travel at light speed,
> > > so could in principle produce a twin-dial clock, available to both
> > > station and train, although it is unclear how that could be of help to
> > > anyone other than demons themselves unless they could become an
> > > interstellar ISP. And if they got a useful role, they might get free
> > > from messing things up and win a few prizes here and there.
> > > --
> > > Harbinger.
>
> > Is light speed fast enough for the demons to be able to do that job?
> > Wouldn't they need to travel instantaneously, without any time
> > elapsing on their own clock or on anyone else's clock, to the station
> > and back so they could adjust the auxiliary time dial? And they would
> > need to return very frequently, to keep resetting the time on the
> > auxiliary dial to the quasi-absolute time.
>
> > If the demons were to pick a speeding clock, with respect to the
> > station, for use as the quasi-absolute time, then the auxiliary dial
> > would lag behind the station clock. If the auxiliary clock were to
> > run very slow then we would need to display milliseconds or
> > microseconds to see any useful passage of quasi-absolute time.
>
> > Taking more and more decimal places of seconds to be useful for slower
> > and slower clocks, at the limit of Planck time, assuming time is
> > quantised, the auxiliary dial might in this limit not be able to show
> > any passsage of time useful to us. That is because one unit of Planck
> > time cannot be subdivided on the auxiliary dial. What use is a dial
> > with only one tick every hundred years, say? Just as well the clocks
> > will also have the local-time dial.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
>
> Post script. Oops. It's much too early in the morning here to think
> straight ... not that it will be any better later on ... my logic
> about moving clock times is probably wrong. But let the demon instead
> take quasi-absolute clocks nearer and nearer to a black hole to get
> the effect of slower and slower ticking of time to be applied to the
> station clocks.
>
> =============================================
> Take the train to the black hole... you are right, it must be much too
> early
> in the morning there.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

A black hole just outside Deansgate station could maybe explain all
that wasted time on local trains there waiting for the signal to go.

I wrote my PS before seeing your post. I had assumed that the demon,
travelling instantaneously and therefore magically, was able to know
the time on all the clocks when stationary with respect to them. But
I realised that I was presuming that the demon's stationary clock
would run slower that the station's stationary clock, when I knew only
that the demon's moving clock appeared, from an observer at the
station, to run slower than the stationary station clock.
===============================================
I set my phone/watch to midnight and the alarm for 7:00 am
and then put it under the pillow and go to sleep. At 7:00 am the
alarm wakes me. I get up, shower, dress, eat breakfast and head
off to the station to catch the 9:14 (which will always leave on
time whenever the station lift is broken, causing me to stumble
down the steps and miss the train) to London Bridge for my 11:00
am appointment at Guys, taking the phone with me, but forgetting
my watch. In my frame of reference (the train), as I look out of the
window I see the countryside passing by. This is a very real
observation, the other passengers do not move relative to me and
they too see the world passing by. Eventually I see London
come to the train, and I conclude that the principle of relativity states
that London Bridge meets the train at the same instant that the train
met London Bridge; and that my forgotten wristwatch has moved
away from me, it is still under the pillow. Since my wristwatch
moved away me, do I conclude that it no longer reads the correct
time and ask my specialist if I need additional medication to
overcome my relativityphobia which is raising my blood pressure,
or additional medication to overcome my psychosis in believing
the idiot Einstein was actually a genius and Galileo a fool?
I will say this. Whatever he recommends, when home returns
to me in my frame of reference I shall check the time of my watch
against the time by my phone and make up my own mind whether
or not to take additional drugs; and probably select a wee dram
of Macallan as a palliative measure against the demon of idiocy,
whilst staring at my watch and wondering how it could keep time
without me looking at it.


From: ben6993 on
On May 1, 10:54 am, "Androcles" <Headmas...(a)Hogwarts.physics_z> wrote:
> "ben6993" <ben6...(a)hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:687bc182-c130-495c-be1e-d665fd165373(a)d39g2000yqa.googlegroups.com...
> On May 1, 9:16 am, "Androcles" <Headmas...(a)Hogwarts.physics_z> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > "ben6993" <ben6...(a)hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> >news:29b72afc-f466-4e77-9642-cd5065827e05(a)n15g2000yqf.googlegroups.com....
> > On May 1, 8:26 am, ben6993 <ben6...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > On May 1, 5:13 am, John Murphy
>
> > > <london.accommodation.homest...(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
> > > > On 1 May, 03:08, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > > > > If the train watches the stations clock go slow then when does it
> > > > > have
> > > > > the time to age more?
>
> > > > > Mitch Raemsch
>
> > > > It never gets a chance to age comparatively, because by definition
> > > > neither 'clock' - nor the train, nor the station knows what the other
> > > > is doing, but it would not help if the train were to visit the station
> > > > in some metrical sense, since that would entail either time gained by
> > > > the train or lost by the station and nor would it work the other way
> > > > around since it would seem to neither 'clock' that they had lost or
> > > > gained.
>
> > > > All the same, demons are thought to be able to travel at light speed,
> > > > so could in principle produce a twin-dial clock, available to both
> > > > station and train, although it is unclear how that could be of help to
> > > > anyone other than demons themselves unless they could become an
> > > > interstellar ISP. And if they got a useful role, they might get free
> > > > from messing things up and win a few prizes here and there.
> > > > --
> > > > Harbinger.
>
> > > Is light speed fast enough for the demons to be able to do that job?
> > > Wouldn't they need to travel instantaneously, without any time
> > > elapsing on their own clock or on anyone else's clock, to the station
> > > and back so they could adjust the auxiliary time dial? And they would
> > > need to return very frequently, to keep resetting the time on the
> > > auxiliary dial to the quasi-absolute time.
>
> > > If the demons were to pick a speeding clock, with respect to the
> > > station, for use as the quasi-absolute time, then the auxiliary dial
> > > would lag behind the station clock. If the auxiliary clock were to
> > > run very slow then we would need to display milliseconds or
> > > microseconds to see any useful passage of quasi-absolute time.
>
> > > Taking more and more decimal places of seconds to be useful for slower
> > > and slower clocks, at the limit of Planck time, assuming time is
> > > quantised, the auxiliary dial might in this limit not be able to show
> > > any passsage of time useful to us. That is because one unit of Planck
> > > time cannot be subdivided on the auxiliary dial. What use is a dial
> > > with only one tick every hundred years, say? Just as well the clocks
> > > will also have the local-time dial.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > > - Show quoted text -
>
> > Post script. Oops. It's much too early in the morning here to think
> > straight ... not that it will be any better later on ... my logic
> > about moving clock times is probably wrong. But let the demon instead
> > take quasi-absolute clocks nearer and nearer to a black hole to get
> > the effect of slower and slower ticking of time to be applied to the
> > station clocks.
>
> > =============================================
> > Take the train to the black hole... you are right, it must be much too
> > early
> > in the morning there.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
>
> A black hole just outside Deansgate station could maybe explain all
> that wasted time on local trains there waiting for the signal to go.
>
> I wrote my PS before seeing your post.  I had assumed that the demon,
> travelling instantaneously and therefore magically, was able to know
> the time on all the clocks when stationary with respect to them.  But
> I realised that I was presuming that the demon's stationary clock
> would run slower that the station's stationary clock, when I knew only
> that the demon's moving clock appeared, from an observer at the
> station, to run slower than the stationary station clock.
> ===============================================
> I set my phone/watch to midnight and the alarm for 7:00 am
> and then put it under the pillow and go to sleep. At 7:00 am the
> alarm wakes me. I get up, shower, dress, eat breakfast and head
> off to the station to catch the 9:14 (which will always leave on
> time whenever the station lift is broken, causing me to stumble
> down the steps and miss the train) to London Bridge for my 11:00
> am appointment at Guys, taking the phone with me, but forgetting
> my watch. In my frame of reference (the train), as I look out of the
> window I see the countryside passing by. This is a very real
> observation, the other passengers do not move relative to me and
> they too see the world passing by.  Eventually I see London
> come to the train, and I conclude that the principle of relativity states
> that London Bridge meets the train at the same instant that the train
> met London Bridge; and that my forgotten wristwatch has moved
> away from me, it is still under the pillow. Since my wristwatch
> moved away me, do I conclude that it no longer reads the correct
> time and ask my specialist if I need additional medication to
> overcome my relativityphobia which is raising my blood pressure,
> or additional medication to overcome my psychosis in believing
> the idiot Einstein was actually a genius and Galileo a fool?
> I will say this. Whatever he recommends, when home returns
> to me in my frame of reference I shall check the time of my watch
> against the time by my phone and make up my own mind whether
> or not to take additional drugs; and probably select a wee dram
> of Macallan as a palliative measure against the demon of idiocy,
> whilst staring at my watch and wondering how it could keep time
> without me looking at it.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

"In 1975 Carol Allie of the University of Maryland synchronized two
atomic clocks and placed one on a plane and flew it around for several
hours and left the other on Earth. When the airborne clock was
returned to Earth, she compared its time with the one that hadn't
moved and found that time had moved a fraction of a second more slowly
for the clock on board the plane."
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/story?id=98062&page=1

There is a photo of Carroll O. Alley on
http://www.physics.umd.edu/people/faculty/alley.html
and it is a photo of a male professor. So do you trust the rest of
the abcnews item which referred to him as "she"?

If you could carry out the above experiment yourself with the two
atomic clocks, and found the two clocks' times had diverged, would you
think differently about the results of your own experiment? Your own
wristwatch and phone aren't accurate enough to show any difference
after your train journey.

I need another correction to my earlier posts. I had presumed that
the stationary clock near a black hole was running slower than the
stationary clock in the station, but I only know that the clock near
the black hole would appear, from an observer at the station, to run
slower than the stationary station clock. I will have to leave it to
the demon to choose his/her own slow ticking quasi-absolute clock.
From: BURT on
On Apr 30, 9:13 pm, John Murphy
<london.accommodation.homest...(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
> On 1 May, 03:08, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > If the train watches the stations clock go slow then when does it have
> > the time to age more?
>
> > Mitch Raemsch
>
> It never gets a chance to age comparatively, because by definition
> neither 'clock' - nor the train, nor the station knows what the other
> is doing, but it would not help if the train were to visit the station

It is intirely possible for the station and the train to compare
clocks while passing each other is it not?

Mitch Raemsch


> in some metrical sense, since that would entail either time gained by
> the train or lost by  the station and nor would it work the other way
> around since it would seem to neither 'clock' that they had lost or
> gained.
>
> All the same, demons are thought to be able to travel at light speed,
> so could in principle produce a twin-dial clock, available to both
> station and train, although it is unclear how that could be of help to
> anyone other than demons themselves unless they could become an
> interstellar ISP. And if they got a useful role, they might get free
> from messing things up and win a few prizes here and there.
> --
> Harbinger.

From: BURT on
If the station will have aged more than the fast moving train how when
passing the station can the train see the station's clock running
slow?

Mitch Raemsch