sciroccokid said:
I think satellites are a great example as they use both GR & SR. People understand they travel at high speeds and "very high up".
I feel I should point out that GR has subsumed SR.
In the case of a satellite it is customary to attribute a velocity time dilation effect to the fact that it has a velocity relativity to the Earth, and a gravitational time dilation effect to the fact that the satellite is located higher in the gravitational well than clocks on the surface of the Earth. GR accounts for
both effects, so it's certainly not an SR effect side by side with an GR effect.
In fact several years ago a discussion was posted on Usenet, showing that in GR you also have the option to find the total time dilation without separating in velocity time dilation and gravitational time dilation. The separation in velocit time dilation and gravitational time dilation is to an extent artificial. In GR you have the option of treating that as a single time dilation effect.
Here is where to find the discussion of 'relativistic time on satellites':
Usenet group: sci.physics
Message author: Kevin Brown
Time 9:00 am Date: 8 april 1997
I located the message in the Google Usenet archive by entering the following combination of search strings: '"Kevin Brown"' 'relativity' 'subsumes'
Cleonis