Well isn't time dilation something that supposedly happens to all objects once in deep space? So wouldn't both be experiencing it, but just one would experience it more than the other?
Time dilation happens from both gravity and speed.
Started by Legend, Sep 02, 2014, 07:17 PM
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Well isn't time dilation something that supposedly happens to all objects once in deep space? So wouldn't both be experiencing it, but just one would experience it more than the other?
VizionEck Cube Royale is releasing this year "I'm Mike Armbrust" -Me |
There is an area in space at 1k. What I'm saying is that right now, barring what appears to be inevitable for everything in the universe, absolute zero is impossible. There is no area in space this has happened and is not within our means to achieve. If absolute zero were achieved now naturally or artificially the scientific community would probably slam on the panic button. Absolute zero will always be a theoretical temperature because measuring something causes it to be affected and if everything in the universe hit absolute zero there would be no way to measure anything.
VizionEck Cube Royale is releasing this year "I'm Mike Armbrust" -Me |
That's the thing, it will take god knows how many years, but once the background radiation in the universe dissipates, it will become 0K.
The curvature of spacetime has something to do with time dilation imo.
That'd give objects a clear reference point that isn't relative.
I need to read up more on space-time and time dilation. Cause I'm over her like DAFUQ???!?!?!?!? LULZ
VizionEck Cube Royale is releasing this year "I'm Mike Armbrust" -Me |
is anything in the universe not in motion? the planet earth is moving, so by association everything on it is as well constantly. Does the sun move or rotate? Black holes?
VizionEck Cube Royale is releasing this year "I'm Mike Armbrust" -Me |
Not in motion relative to what?
are there no absolutes in the universe? I mean just like the idea of "absolute zero" is there such a thing as "absolute inertia"
If I have two rocks and throw one and not the other, that doesn't mean that the one not thrown is moving because I threw the other rock.
Motion as defined as movement, or moving, having force applied to it where it changes its physical space of occupancy in some way shape or form. Not necessarily relative to anything. However, such as instances on our planet where there is a base motion occurring to all things equally all the time I would say that counts as motion.
So can something perhaps in space be stabilized in and of its own with out being affected by external forces (or it being counteracted mechanically some how) to where its not moving period?
VizionEck Cube Royale is releasing this year "I'm Mike Armbrust" -Me |
There's absolutes, but absolute speed is not one of them.
If you were in a spaceship with no windows, you wouldn't be able to calculate speed. You can calculate and feel accelerations and therefore determine changes in speed, but that's it.
What? Who doesn't put a speedometer in a space ship?
You're talking about the "Big Freeze", right?
There's absolutes, but absolute speed is not one of them.
If you were in a spaceship with no windows, you wouldn't be able to calculate speed. You can calculate and feel accelerations and therefore determine changes in speed, but that's it.
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