Recent content by David Barclay
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Graduate Speed of force > speed of light.
You said that gravity propagates at light speed, did you not say that? How can gravity itself propagate at light speed? Or how can gravity propagate at any speed? Where pray tell is the evidence to support this? Gravity results from a space time curve, its an effect of the space/time...- David Barclay
- Post #11
- Forum: Optics
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Graduate Speed of force > speed of light.
I'm not sure that gravity propagates, as this has not been demonstrated or proven to be a fact. If you think about it, it would be a bit inconvenient if it did. Where would that leave us? And if it does propagate, where does it propagate from? I realize there are hopes of finding...- David Barclay
- Post #9
- Forum: Optics
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Graduate Speed of force > speed of light.
I apologize for making a mess of this...let me try again. There was only one detonation and it occurred in the north, but the recording station was in Antarctica. They wanted to determine how long it would take for the equipment to detect the detonation in the north. And using atomic clocks...- David Barclay
- Post #8
- Forum: Optics
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Graduate Speed of force > speed of light.
That was the whole point which made it a news story. I don't know if you are aware of this but many years ago GE was doing research and development on instantaneous transformation, but how far they got I don't know as that sort of thing is usually classified. If you are right about the...- David Barclay
- Post #7
- Forum: Optics
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Graduate Speed of force > speed of light.
I suspect instantaneous would be faster than the speed of light. According to a news story appearing in the New York Times many years ago the Russians, using an atomic clock at the South Pole were timing the delay between a nuclear detonation in the far north and the south pole and found no...- David Barclay
- Post #5
- Forum: Optics