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Clocks On The Space Shuttle |
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| Feb1-04, 05:34 AM | #1 |
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Clocks On The Space Shuttle
I just read that the clocks on board the space shuttle go more slowly than the clocks on earth.
does that mean time has speeded up for those on the shutte or slowed down ? i reckon it means time has slowed down. if they stayed up for a year by their clocks then by our clocks more than a year will have passed. |
| Feb1-04, 06:19 AM | #2 |
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Is this a question, or statment?
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| Feb1-04, 10:50 AM | #3 |
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it was a question as I am really not sure.
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| Feb1-04, 07:35 PM | #4 |
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Clocks On The Space Shuttle |
| Feb1-04, 08:18 PM | #5 |
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Mentor
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The speed of the space shuttle causes the clocks to slow down relative to a clock on earh. The altitude (reduced gravitational force) causes the clocks to speed up. The net effec is that the clocks (time) go faster in space than on earth.
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| Feb1-04, 08:37 PM | #6 |
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| Feb2-04, 12:02 PM | #7 |
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Mr. Robin Parsons - Your second post was uncalled for. There was nothing wrong with the question. Yes, sam1967 could have used the search feature to find some similar topic...but give a new member a break. I'd rather see repeated discussions than rude responses.
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| Feb2-04, 06:50 PM | #8 |
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| Feb2-04, 07:10 PM | #9 |
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| Feb3-04, 01:07 PM | #10 |
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thanks [:))]
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| Feb4-04, 06:21 AM | #11 |
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[a)] No Problemo [a)]
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| Aug3-11, 08:11 AM | #12 |
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You might be incorrect, the clocks on the shuttle are not your wind up clocks next to your bed.
They are digital and atomically. gravity does not effect the mechanics of the clock because there are no gears, weights,springs in it. |
| Aug3-11, 08:30 AM | #13 |
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You noticed, didn't you, that this thread was 7 years old?
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| Jun27-12, 08:27 AM | #14 |
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Lol. Space time even exists in forums.
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| Jun27-12, 01:55 PM | #15 |
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| Jun27-12, 02:17 PM | #16 |
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An approximate equation for the rate of time flow for an object in Earth's gravity field is [tex]\frac{d\tau}{dt} = \sqrt{1 - \frac{2 G M}{c^{2} r} - \frac{v^{2}}{c^{2}}}[/tex] For an object on Earth's surface, we can eliminate the v^2 term by using the poles as a reference; since the Earth's surface is (approximately) an equipotential surface, clocks on the surface all go at the same rate, and the rate at the poles is the easiest to calculate. The polar radius of the Earth is 6.36 x 10^6 meters according to Wikipedia. G is 6.67 x 10^-11, and M for the Earth is 5.97 x 10^24 kg. This gives a result of [itex]d\tau / dt = 1 - 6.97 * 10^{-10}[/itex]. For objects in orbit, since v^2 = GM/r for an object in a free-fall circular orbit (which we'll assume is a good enough approximation for this problem), we can rewrite the above more simply as [tex]\frac{d\tau}{dt} = \sqrt{1 - \frac{3G M}{c^{2} r}}[/tex] For the Space Shuttle, r is about 200 miles, or 3.2 x 10^5 m, above the Earth's surface. For the GPS satellites, r is about 4.2 Earth radii. The corresponding numbers are: Shuttle: [itex]d\tau / dt = 1 - 9.95* 10^{-10}[/itex], which is slower than ground clocks by about 3 parts in 10^-10. GPS satellite: [itex]d\tau / dt = 1 - 2.49 * 10^{-10}[/itex], which is faster than ground clocks by about 4.5 parts in 10^-10. |
| Jun27-12, 02:34 PM | #17 |
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Mentor
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