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| Tags: bucket, experiment, newtons, spin |
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N:dlzc D:aol T:com (dlzc) wrote: Dear Bill Hobba: "Bill Hobba" wrote in message news
...There is no big deal. If you consider the bucket rotating in an inertial frame then you get the standard curved water shape as a result of centrifugal forces. But the question is how does the water know how to curve? - the answer is - because it is rotating relative to an inertial frame. But wait a minute - an inertial frame is simply a conceptual conventional standard of rest with a conceptual coordinate system - how can acceleration wrt to something conceptual cause the water to curve? The answer of course is that it is no more a problem than the forces that appear when you accelerate wrt to an internal frame (it fact it is a result of those). To get around these 'problems' Mach proposed it was rotation relative to the distant stars. It has long been known that a frame at rest relative to the distant stars was inertial. This provided the 'thing' it accelerated relative to when an inertial frame was otherwise just something conceptual. Me - I think it is a load of codswallop - but each to their own. The answer is obvious - Newton's first law is in fact saying the conceptually there always exits a frame where particles move with constant velocity unless acted on by a force - whenever we see non inertial forces appear it is obvious you must be accelerating wrt to some frame - even if it is just conceptual. The is not to say Mach's principle is wrong - it may be correct - I just think it is not required. It would be a little hard to spin the Universe to find out, wouldn't it? How would you feel if Gravity probe B showed frame dragging? Wouldn't this apply to the "bucket test"? (In case you hadn't figured it out, I pretty much like Mach's interpretation.) You will like it even more once you realize that a clock is an inertiameter. The Earth does not only drags the frames, it creates its own inertia. Every inertiameter, formerly called clock, shows that on Earth inertia is a little bit higher, one in a billion. We just need to look at the inertiameters that are carried on board of the gps-satellites : these run fast, because there is a billionth part less inertia at their altitude. Mach's principle is confirmed by every clock, but we morons looked right past it, all the time, or should I say, with all our inertia ? :-) Uwe Hayek. -- To be controlled in our economic pursuits, is to be controlled in everything -- F.A.Hayek. |
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