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russ_watters
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If you want, start a thread in TD and prove it. Don't attemt to hijack other people's threads.David said:c is not constant and atomic clock rates aren’t either.
Yes, our definition of speed is very specific: and it has to be. That's the reason we mentors are such sticklers for accuracy in definitions. If you use your definition and plug it into the equations of physics, it will return nonsensical answers.billy_boy_999 said:your definition of "speed" is very specific and of course this is the tacit conventional definition...but really, why do you have to keep insisting this is nonsense? the practical consequence is that you can travel 10 light years in 1 year...
Further, who'se clock and who'se meterstick would you use in your definition? Any one you want? Let's say you travel to a star that by Earth's measurement is 10 LY away. Due to your speed, you think its 5 LY away. Another ship passes you on the way and according to them, its 3 LY away. Couldn't you reasonably use whatever distance you choose according to your definition? Doesn't that therefore make such a definition useless?
The same problem (and solution) exists in Galilean relativity. A man is walking forward at 1m/s on a train which is moving at 10m/s. He sees himself to be moving at 1m/s. A woman at the station sees him and measures his speed to be 11m/s. Different speeds, but one very important thing in common: both measure the distance and time in their own frame of reference.
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