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Time Travel Discussion
Time travel a reality.... what do you think?
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<blockquote data-quote="Einstein" data-source="post: 85875" data-attributes="member: 288"><p>I would ask you to do the length calculations of the hypotenuse yourself. After the string is cut. The path of the weight becomes one side of a right triangle. The path of the object is linear. But what I discovered is that the side of the right triangle that represents length against time being what we are taught in school, co-varies with the length of the hypotenuse. The hypotenuse does not change in length at a constant rate. The rate is changing. As it would if it was an acceleration. So from the perspective of someone standing at the center of the circle of previous rotation, the object is accelerating away. Now my main argument is that since the centrifugal force before the string was cut is directed away from the center of rotation, then after the string is cut, one should be measuring what is happening between the center of rotation and the object. Just using the Pythagorean theorem for this calculation does indeed show an acceleration to be present. </p><p></p><p>Another thing I want to point out is that before the string is cut the path of the object does have two forces acting on it. So that path requires those two forces to be present. So the resulting path even though it appears to be linear, is the result of the path of those two prior forces. So one path shows a velocity. And the second path shows an acceleration.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Einstein, post: 85875, member: 288"] I would ask you to do the length calculations of the hypotenuse yourself. After the string is cut. The path of the weight becomes one side of a right triangle. The path of the object is linear. But what I discovered is that the side of the right triangle that represents length against time being what we are taught in school, co-varies with the length of the hypotenuse. The hypotenuse does not change in length at a constant rate. The rate is changing. As it would if it was an acceleration. So from the perspective of someone standing at the center of the circle of previous rotation, the object is accelerating away. Now my main argument is that since the centrifugal force before the string was cut is directed away from the center of rotation, then after the string is cut, one should be measuring what is happening between the center of rotation and the object. Just using the Pythagorean theorem for this calculation does indeed show an acceleration to be present. Another thing I want to point out is that before the string is cut the path of the object does have two forces acting on it. So that path requires those two forces to be present. So the resulting path even though it appears to be linear, is the result of the path of those two prior forces. So one path shows a velocity. And the second path shows an acceleration. [/QUOTE]
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Time travel a reality.... what do you think?
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