russ_watters said:
Sorry, there is no absolute position in the universe and no experiment that can detect such a thing. That's the entire point of the first postulate of Special Relativity.
Sorry, the first principle of
Special Relativity doesn't hold in my universe.* Does it hold in yours? Or to phrase it differently will your reconciliation of quantum mechanics and relativity be published in time to be considered for next year's Nobel Prize in Physics? No, maybe the year after? I'm amazed that no one else thought of discarding general relativity... (End sarcasm mode.)
I spoke of something which is (measurably) true in quantum mechanics--the energy of the vacuum defines a zero speed reference for every point in the universe. (Probably all of them are different, but that waits on someone's grand unification paper.) This point is not theory--the LHC could not work without considering the effect. (Well, you could try to adjust and align all the magnets "by hand," good luck with that. Oops, too much caffiene. But at least this time the sarcasm is pointed back at me.)
It happens to be easier to measure the speed of the solar system relative to the cosmic background radiation. (The CMB also defines a specific zero velocity at any point in space.) That value is 627±22 km/sec (about ten times the Earth's velocity in its orbit around the sun).
Some of the errors in that number are systemic. So don't put too much faith in the error bars, which are relative to the data. But still, the Earth probably never passes through the same point relative to the CMB twice.
*To clarify, I am saying that the Principle of Relativity doesn't hold in my universe. The Principle of Invariant Light Speed does. I've seen explanations of SR which reorder these principles or turn them into postulates. You seem to be referring to the Principle of Relativity which, as indicated, is not true in general relativity. Gravity, which is not considered as such in SR, is most of what GR is about.