Message from @Citizen Z

Discord ID: 616390645170438145


2019-08-28 21:48:21 UTC  

What a comeback

2019-08-28 21:48:52 UTC  

Super cool info there

2019-08-28 21:48:54 UTC  

VwV

2019-08-28 21:48:58 UTC  

Check it out

2019-08-28 21:50:26 UTC  

That's a bibliography about again time dialation in special relativity

2019-08-28 21:50:40 UTC  

I'm seriously wondering if you know the difference

2019-08-28 21:50:56 UTC  

We sharing reading material?

2019-08-28 21:52:44 UTC  

oof I don't have image perms

2019-08-28 21:53:12 UTC  

now wait

2019-08-28 21:53:21 UTC  

yea?

2019-08-28 21:53:29 UTC  
2019-08-28 21:53:35 UTC  

You never responded to me last time

2019-08-28 21:53:38 UTC  

if gravity doesn't exist, what's the explanation behind gravitational time dilation

2019-08-28 21:53:43 UTC  

I presented you an experiment and confirmation of GR

2019-08-28 21:53:51 UTC  

And you said "I've never seen it before so I'll look"

2019-08-28 21:53:57 UTC  

Then never talked about it again

2019-08-28 21:55:23 UTC  

What experiment

2019-08-28 21:56:04 UTC  

Who wants to talk about gravimeters? 😃

2019-08-28 21:56:21 UTC  

I do

2019-08-28 21:56:27 UTC  

nice

2019-08-28 21:56:49 UTC  

What do you think they prove

2019-08-28 21:57:09 UTC  

Have you ever used one?

2019-08-28 21:57:15 UTC  

Well they prove that mass attracts mass

2019-08-28 21:57:33 UTC  

And they measure that attraction

2019-08-28 21:57:56 UTC  

with a super duper sensitive spring device

2019-08-28 21:58:12 UTC  

They buried 5 tons of lead in the ground, then they used this super sensitive spring device called a gravimeter and moved it slowly horizontally over it. When more mass is under it, the spring compresses more. I'd show a graph, but I don't have image permissions, so here's a link to the tests they did. http://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/bitstream/JRC110440/jrc110440_technical_note_preparatory_tests_2016-17.pdf

2019-08-28 21:58:37 UTC  

I have never used one

2019-08-28 21:58:42 UTC  

Have you heard of the Allias Effect

2019-08-28 21:58:48 UTC  

No

2019-08-28 21:59:03 UTC  

Abstract
Conventional explanations for observations of anomalous behaviour of mechanical
systems during solar eclipses are critically reviewed. These observations include the work
of Allais with paraconical pendula, those of Saxl and Allen with a torsion pendulum and
measurements with gravimeters. Attempts of replications of these experiments and recent
gravimeter results are discussed and unpublished data by Latham and by Saxl et al. is
presented. Some of the data are summarized and re-analyzed. Especially, attention is paid
to observations of tilt of the vertical, which seems to play an important role in this matter
and recommendations for future research are given. It is concluded that all the proposed
conventional explanations either qualitatively or quantitatively fail to explain the
observations.

2019-08-28 21:59:09 UTC  

Thanks for the info

2019-08-28 21:59:48 UTC  

Haven't they failed to recreate this effect so far?

2019-08-28 21:59:53 UTC  

Yeah np. Ty also

2019-08-28 22:00:03 UTC  

@IG have they?

2019-08-28 22:00:20 UTC  

I haven't read about in a long time

2019-08-28 22:00:24 UTC  

I know people plan every eclipse to try and recreate it, I just haven't heard of someone being successful.

2019-08-28 22:00:33 UTC  

The veracity of the Allais effect remains controversial among the scientific community, as its testing has frequently met with inconsistent or ambiguous results over more than five decades of observation.

2019-08-28 22:00:54 UTC  

@Citizen Z you do realize atomic clocks existed before einstein right