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All this talk of solstices and sunrise/sunset has got me thinking about
time: According to relativity, the rate at which clocks "tick" depends upon their velocity (time dilation and all that). Presumably, then, clocks on earth change their rate of "ticking" as the linear speed of the Earth changes in its orbit around the Sun? So what the hell do we use as a reference or "constant" clock? -- Stephen Tonkin : UK Amateur Telescope Making Pages : http://www.aegis1.demon.co.uk/atm.htm : (50.9105N 1.829W) http://groups.google.ie/groups?hl=en....de mon.co.uk Back 9 years ago that was a very good question so the regulars here should now be capable of answering it for you. |
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![]() Martin Brown wrote: wrote: All this talk of solstices and sunrise/sunset has got me thinking about time: According to relativity, the rate at which clocks "tick" depends upon their velocity (time dilation and all that). Presumably, then, clocks on earth change their rate of "ticking" as the linear speed of the Earth changes in its orbit around the Sun? So what the hell do we use as a reference or "constant" clock? -- Stephen Tonkin : UK Amateur Telescope Making Pages : http://www.aegis1.demon.co.uk/atm.htm : (50.9105N 1.829W) http://groups.google.ie/groups?hl=en....de mon.co.uk Back 9 years ago that was a very good question so the regulars here should now be capable of answering it for you. Some of the regulars are still here. The relativistic difference between a stationary terrestrial clock and one in a nearly circular orbit at 1AU is about 5ppb. The deviation due to the orbital eccentricity of 0.0167 amounts to about 83ppt. These corrections are only really significant for pulsar research, VLBI and a few other exotic timing experiments. eg I am afraid you are so technically imprecise that it is almost difficult to reply.'Stationary terrestial clock' has no meaning whatsoever,the equable pace of hour,minutes and seconds to which the sum total of a 24 hour clock corresponds is the axial rotation of the Earth through 360 degrees,the assumption of constant axial rotation and the Equation of Time format which keep it fixed to terrestial longitudes.Unless you have'nt noticed there are still 360 deg in a circle and as a valid event,the axial rotation of the Earth must correspond to 24 hours exactly,at least if you use any sort of clock. I can answer Tonkin's question directly,the reference for the constant 24 hour day and the pace to which equable divisions of hours,minutes and seconds are fixed are based on the assumption that axial rotation is constant and that other influences vary thepace of a natural day from one noon to the next. Go ahead,read Newton's phrasing of the difference between the clock day and the natural day or what amounts to the same thing ;the Equation of Time - "Absolute time, in astronomy, is distinguished from relative, by the equation or correlation of the vulgar time. For the natural days are truly unequal, though they are commonly considered as equal and used for a measure of time; astronomers correct this inequality for their more accurate deducing of the celestial motions." http://members.tripod.com/~gravitee/...tions.htm#time As the Equation of Time is really a mathematical bridge ( addition and subtraction of minutes and seconds),what part of the Equation of Time would you care to reject,it is no use saying 'time is not absolute' like a headless chicken,you have to justify why you determine that the natural unequal day (relative time) is a great way to model the structure and motion of celestial objects and why you dislike the equable 24 hour clock day. With all due respect,relativists are crazy by virtue of Newtonian ambiguities and not the ones they impose. http://www.astro.northwestern.edu/As...ers/burgay.pdf Jodrell Bank's current choice of hydrogen maser clocks manage to provide short term frequency stability of 1 part in 10^15 over a typical scan. To put it into perspective a simple quartz crystal wrist watch will manage about 1ppm (1 in 10^6) if well trimmed or more likely mass produced around 6ppm subject to some thermal drift. NIST have a very nice new site on time and frequency standards: http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq/general/enc-q.htm Regards, Martin Brown Nezumi Scientific Clocks do not measure a quantity called 'time' even if it is convenient to imagine they do,astronomically the origins of the 24 hour clock day is determined by the difference between compound motions of the Earth on its axis and its motion about the Sun. The division of the day into equable hours stretches back into remote antiquity but the gauge for this average day ultimately translates into constant axial rotation within a heliocentric setting.The Equation of Time comes from a geocentric era therefore constant axial rotation and the terrestial longitudes which contain the 360degree/24 hour equivalency are maintained through an assumption. When Newton mentions that the 24 hour clock day has no external reference he is simply stating the obvious,the impossibility of determining axial rotation in isolation from its compound orbital motion but the man is confused and confuses his readers in scrambling an assumption into an observational fact " It may be, that there is no such thing as an equable motion, whereby time may be accurately measured." For an astronomer who is concerned with the equable pace of a 24 hour day the above sentence is utter nonsense.How you choose to correct it makes a big difference to astronomy for absolutely nobody is bigger than the priceless astronomical jewel which facilitates so much through the Equation of time and certainly not for a peevish ****er like Newton. Whatever perverse satisfaction you get out of chucking around the words absolute and relative,you are doing it at the expense of my astronomical heritage which was buried to make way for the era of cataloguer/theorist. |
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I liked the answer you give the guy on Foucault's pendulum..I wonder
what chance kids have when adults get some perverse satisfaction in justifying things one way when it suits and then switching to and alternative value.Unless you have noticed,I have been almost screaming that no civilisation in sincerity can support two values for axial rotation through 360 degrees or generalise it when it is convenient. Go with axial rotation to inertial space/23 hours 56 min 04 sec and you have the luxury of warped space,multiple universe and whatnot or go with axial rotation to 360/24 and recover the heritage of astronomy,human ingenuity and invention and the more comfortable things that do not lead to absurdities. I specifically found a website for you - http://www.draysonbeckett.co.uk/gunn...story.html#top Colin Rosenthal wrote: On Mon, 15 Nov 1999 10:26:20 -0000, Thorsten Brabetz wrote: Annette Vogels wrote in message ... Hello, My name is Laura, and I am doing project for Science class at the Ithaca High School (boo, hiss,Thanks, I know I am young). Another experiment, but one that takes a bit of time, is to use a pendulum. If it is a pretty big one that swings for quite some time, you might be able to proove the rotation of earth because it will keep its position in space, i.e. would turn 360 deg in 24 hours (if I remember right, never tried it myself though...). Exact rotation time depends on your latitude it is exactly 24 hours at the poles, and never rotates at all on the equator. Exactly. Look up the phrase "Foucault Pendulum". It's not, however, practical to build one yourself. It isn't all that difficult. The most dodgy part is needing a long period pendulum with a very rigid mount and a pretty massive weight. We used to have 20' one in the physics dept reception area. It probably isn't a suitable experiment for high school though. The coriolis force also has a direct and significant effect on the flight of artillery shells. Artillery has always been amusing as gunnery correction tables have usually been prepared with wars in the Northern hemisphere in mind. Every S hemisphere war using artillery upto and including the Falklands has revealed gunnery table faults related to latitude N/S. Regards, Martin Brown http://groups.google.ie/groups?hl=en...40pandora. be |
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Hi Gerald
what do you do for a living? professor? teacher? Just wondered as you seem to have much knowledge Cheers wrote in message oups.com... I liked the answer you give the guy on Foucault's pendulum..I wonder what chance kids have when adults get some perverse satisfaction in justifying things one way when it suits and then switching to and alternative value.Unless you have noticed,I have been almost screaming that no civilisation in sincerity can support two values for axial rotation through 360 degrees or generalise it when it is convenient. Go with axial rotation to inertial space/23 hours 56 min 04 sec and you have the luxury of warped space,multiple universe and whatnot or go with axial rotation to 360/24 and recover the heritage of astronomy,human ingenuity and invention and the more comfortable things that do not lead to absurdities. I specifically found a website for you - http://www.draysonbeckett.co.uk/gunn...story.html#top Colin Rosenthal wrote: On Mon, 15 Nov 1999 10:26:20 -0000, Thorsten Brabetz wrote: Annette Vogels wrote in message ... Hello, My name is Laura, and I am doing project for Science class at the Ithaca High School (boo, hiss,Thanks, I know I am young). Another experiment, but one that takes a bit of time, is to use a pendulum. If it is a pretty big one that swings for quite some time, you might be able to proove the rotation of earth because it will keep its position in space, i.e. would turn 360 deg in 24 hours (if I remember right, never tried it myself though...). Exact rotation time depends on your latitude it is exactly 24 hours at the poles, and never rotates at all on the equator. Exactly. Look up the phrase "Foucault Pendulum". It's not, however, practical to build one yourself. It isn't all that difficult. The most dodgy part is needing a long period pendulum with a very rigid mount and a pretty massive weight. We used to have 20' one in the physics dept reception area. It probably isn't a suitable experiment for high school though. The coriolis force also has a direct and significant effect on the flight of artillery shells. Artillery has always been amusing as gunnery correction tables have usually been prepared with wars in the Northern hemisphere in mind. Every S hemisphere war using artillery upto and including the Falklands has revealed gunnery table faults related to latitude N/S. Regards, Martin Brown http://groups.google.ie/groups?hl=en...40pandora. be |
#6
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In article . com,
wrote: All this talk of solstices and sunrise/sunset has got me thinking about time: According to relativity, the rate at which clocks "tick" depends upon their velocity (time dilation and all that). Presumably, then, clocks on earth change their rate of "ticking" as the linear speed of the Earth changes in its orbit around the Sun? Yes. In addition, as the distance to the Sun (and planets) varies during the year and the clock is immersed in a varying gravitational potential, the rate changes because of gravitational redshift. The two effects together produce an approximately sinusoidal difference between terrestrial time TT and the coordinate time scale that you would use to interrogate JPL planetary ephemerides (Teph, similar to TDB), with an amplitude of 1.6 ms. An example of an astronomical application that is critically dependent on taking these effects into account is the prediction of pulse arrival times from the millisecond pulsars. So what the hell do we use as a reference or "constant" clock? Atomic clocks deliver our best quality terrestrial time. If you add the appropriate fixed offset (exactly 32.184 s) to TAI you get our best implementation of TT. To get the various coordinate time scales, you apply mathematical models that take into account the position and speed of the Earth and the positions of the other solar system bodies. Patrick Wallace ------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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In message , Martin Brown
writes wrote: All this talk of solstices and sunrise/sunset has got me thinking about time: According to relativity, the rate at which clocks "tick" depends upon their velocity (time dilation and all that). Presumably, then, clocks on earth change their rate of "ticking" as the linear speed of the Earth changes in its orbit around the Sun? So what the hell do we use as a reference or "constant" clock? -- Stephen Tonkin : UK Amateur Telescope Making Pages : http://www.aegis1.demon.co.uk/atm.htm : (50.9105N 1.829W) http://groups.google.ie/groups?hl=en...yEw2y%40aegis1 .demon.co.uk Back 9 years ago that was a very good question so the regulars here should now be capable of answering it for you. Some of the regulars are still here. The relativistic difference between a stationary terrestrial clock and one in a nearly circular orbit at 1AU is about 5ppb. The deviation due to the orbital eccentricity of 0.0167 amounts to about 83ppt. These corrections are only really significant for pulsar research, VLBI and a few other exotic timing experiments. eg http://www.astro.northwestern.edu/As...ers/burgay.pdf Isn't GPS the classic example of relativistic effects on clocks affecting everyday life? http://www.phys.lsu.edu/mog/mog9/node9.html -- Support the DEC Tsunami Appeal http://www.dec.org.uk/. Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
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Jonathan Silverlight wrote:
In message , Martin Brown writes Some of the regulars are still here. The relativistic difference between a stationary terrestrial clock and one in a nearly circular orbit at 1AU is about 5ppb. The deviation due to the orbital eccentricity of 0.0167 amounts to about 83ppt. These corrections are only really significant for pulsar research, VLBI and a few other exotic timing experiments. eg http://www.astro.northwestern.edu/As...ers/burgay.pdf Isn't GPS the classic example of relativistic effects on clocks affecting everyday life? http://www.phys.lsu.edu/mog/mog9/node9.html Yes. Although that is correcting for orbital velocity and height of the satellite relative to the Earth. Amusingly because electronic engineers don't understand relativity (and certain electronics rags like Wireless World recruit editors that publish junk anti-relativity articles) they had an override to disable the relativistic clock corrections - just in case. But they were never needed. Modern atomic clocks are good enough and portable so that one of the RI Christmas lectures has demonstrated it. Another interesting snippet. When the first double pulsar was discovered the observations provided such a good test of GR that it found a mistake in the computer algebra system used to compute the corrections for Jupiters longitude. Until then we had never had a remote external precision clock that was studied regularly in so much detail. Regards, Martin Brown |
#9
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![]() Jonathan Silverlight wrote: In message , Martin Brown writes wrote: All this talk of solstices and sunrise/sunset has got me thinking about time: According to relativity, the rate at which clocks "tick" depends upon their velocity (time dilation and all that). Presumably, then, clocks on earth change their rate of "ticking" as the linear speed of the Earth changes in its orbit around the Sun? So what the hell do we use as a reference or "constant" clock? -- Stephen Tonkin : UK Amateur Telescope Making Pages : http://www.aegis1.demon.co.uk/atm.htm : (50.9105N 1.829W) http://groups.google.ie/groups?hl=en...yEw2y%40aegis1 .demon.co.uk Back 9 years ago that was a very good question so the regulars here should now be capable of answering it for you. Some of the regulars are still here. The relativistic difference between a stationary terrestrial clock and one in a nearly circular orbit at 1AU is about 5ppb. The deviation due to the orbital eccentricity of 0.0167 amounts to about 83ppt. These corrections are only really significant for pulsar research, VLBI and a few other exotic timing experiments. eg http://www.astro.northwestern.edu/As...ers/burgay.pdf Isn't GPS the classic example of relativistic effects on clocks affecting everyday life? http://www.phys.lsu.edu/mog/mog9/node9.html -- Support the DEC Tsunami Appeal http://www.dec.org.uk/. Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. Ha,ha ha, you are no more mearing answering Tonkin's question than the other guy but you set the using boring bait that the aetherists fall for every time. The reference for the pace of equable hours,minutes,seconds,nanoseconds, picoseconds and any subdivision of a 24 hour day ultimately is derived from the equivalency between rotation through 360 degrees at 15 deg per hour giving 24 hours in total.Unless you have'nt noticed,the longitude values which carry the equivalency are a total human invention designed around the geometry/geography of the Earth . "It may be, that there is no such thing as an equable motion, whereby time may be accurately measured. All motions may be accelerated and retarded, but the true, or equable, progress of absolute time is liable to no change." http://members.tripod.com/~gravitee/...tions.htm#time Those great astronomers/geometers who came up with the principles of the equable 24 hour day and subsequently equable hours,minutes and seconds recognised that there is no external marker for the equable day hence the Equation of Time correction which removes the natural inequality by means of the axial rotation of the Earth to the Sun. Is there any sane person who can see where the error slips into Newton's reasoning and that it simply is not a matter of saying 'time is not absolute'.Is there a single astronomer who can tell the theorists that they created a fiction with Newtonian relative/absolute ambiguities that surface every time the value for the rotation rate of the Earth on its axis is given. The answer to Tonkin's question is that a clock registers a standard pace that is permanently fixed to the Earth's geometry/geography in terms of 360/24 and any amount of subdivisions of that geometry.The GPS still corrects back to the same principles which make clocks good rulers of distance just as Harrison's clocks did. Relativists fooled people into believing that it is all extremely complicated but anyone who can handle Newton's stupid reworking and tampering with the Equation of Time and his switch to the sidereal format will find relativity and relativists hysterically funny. |
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I guess you did'nt read the article by the inventor of the cesium
clock. http://www.btinternet.com/~time.lord/Relativity.html That is the sad part,the theorists manage to assimilate even the life's work of this man to supporting relativity and the basic Newtonian error that exists behind the whoe exotic trash. The only attribute of relativity is that it does focus on the original error or tampering by Newton in hijacking the existing astronomical network to support his terrestial ballistics agenda.The relativist did'nt change Newton,they simply expanded his geocentric/heliocentric orbital equivalency into outright homocentricity. A cataloguer could not spot the error but an astronomer could hence any participant in uk.sci.astronomy knows that he is an astronomer and not merely a cataloguer.I am still waiting for an astronomer who can pick up where Roemer left off before the cataloguers/theorists made a mess of astronomy. |
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