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Question concerning coordinates in space.
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<blockquote data-quote="Phoenix" data-source="post: 6550" data-attributes="member: 10"><p><strong>Question concerning coordinates in space.</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p>Let me explain the Michelson-Morley experiment.</p><p></p><p>Lets say you have a boat crossing a flowing river. Lets say the boat goes 10 miles an hour and the river is going 5 miles an hour. Lets say you go out and come back a distance of 10 miles, one trip you go across the river, the other trip you go down and back up the river.</p><p></p><p>On the trip going down and back up the river you will be traveling 15 miles per hour while you work with the current and 5 miles per hour when you work against the current. It would thus take 2 and 2/3rds of an hour to go with and against the current.</p><p></p><p>Going across the current the boat will have to compensate being thrown off coarse 5 miles per hour at a right angle. The increase of would be found by the Pythagorean theorem. Sqrt(10^2 + 5^2)= about 11 miles. It would thus take the boat 1.1 hours to go back and forth on the side ways trip. Or 2.2 hours.</p><p></p><p>There is thus to be expected a difference of time depending on which direction the board goes based on the drag. </p><p></p><p>The Michelson-Morley experiment is based on the idea that light experiences a like drag, or displacement, because of the coordinates of space. Light should be slightly thrown off coarse because the earth is moving in the manner of</p><p></p><p>And our galaxy's motion in the universe.</p><p></p><p>The Michelson-Morley interferometer is basically the boat scenario done with light. What they discovered though was that no displacement ever occurred, no matter how they fine tuned their instrument, no matter what time of day or day of year they tried it. They were left concluding the idea of a coordinate system that things would be displaced on was an invalid idea. Einstein started postulating his theory of relativity without absolute Newtonian space and it helped to explain the results of the experiment.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Phoenix, post: 6550, member: 10"] [b]Question concerning coordinates in space.[/b] Let me explain the Michelson-Morley experiment. Lets say you have a boat crossing a flowing river. Lets say the boat goes 10 miles an hour and the river is going 5 miles an hour. Lets say you go out and come back a distance of 10 miles, one trip you go across the river, the other trip you go down and back up the river. On the trip going down and back up the river you will be traveling 15 miles per hour while you work with the current and 5 miles per hour when you work against the current. It would thus take 2 and 2/3rds of an hour to go with and against the current. Going across the current the boat will have to compensate being thrown off coarse 5 miles per hour at a right angle. The increase of would be found by the Pythagorean theorem. Sqrt(10^2 + 5^2)= about 11 miles. It would thus take the boat 1.1 hours to go back and forth on the side ways trip. Or 2.2 hours. There is thus to be expected a difference of time depending on which direction the board goes based on the drag. The Michelson-Morley experiment is based on the idea that light experiences a like drag, or displacement, because of the coordinates of space. Light should be slightly thrown off coarse because the earth is moving in the manner of And our galaxy's motion in the universe. The Michelson-Morley interferometer is basically the boat scenario done with light. What they discovered though was that no displacement ever occurred, no matter how they fine tuned their instrument, no matter what time of day or day of year they tried it. They were left concluding the idea of a coordinate system that things would be displaced on was an invalid idea. Einstein started postulating his theory of relativity without absolute Newtonian space and it helped to explain the results of the experiment. [/QUOTE]
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