Namloh2000
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what the heck is motion anyway??
How can things even move?
How can things even move?
The discussion explores the nature of motion, its philosophical implications, and its relationship to concepts such as the Big Bang and Zeno's paradoxes. Participants delve into both mathematical and conceptual frameworks, examining how motion is perceived relative to different frames of reference.
Participants express a range of views on the nature of motion, with no consensus reached. Some agree on the relativity of motion, while others challenge the implications of Zeno's paradoxes and the mathematical definitions of motion.
Limitations include the dependence on various philosophical interpretations of motion, the unresolved nature of Zeno's paradoxes, and the differing views on the relationship between mass, energy, and velocity.
This discussion may be of interest to those exploring philosophical questions about motion, students of physics and mathematics, and individuals curious about the implications of relativity and quantum theory.
MiGUi said:Let be an object in a n-dimensional space. If we have a frame system and it base of n independent coordinates {x_1, x_2, ..., x_n} to refer its position, we say that the object is moving or is variating its j-esim coordinate if
\frac{dx_j}{dt} \ne 0
Math is cool![]()
selfAdjoint said:At those speeds, the deviation between the correct relativistic addition formula and the approximate linear one are too small to measure without special equipment, so the linear answer 30 mph is OK. Now try it with the speeder going .9c relative to Earth and the radar going .6c.
selfAdjoint said:At those speeds, the deviation between the correct relativistic addition formula and the approximate linear one are too small to measure without special equipment, so the linear answer 30 mph is OK. Now try it with the speeder going .9c relative to Earth and the radar going .6c.
p-brane said:"Massless objects like photons don't have rest frames, so the reasoning doesn't work for them."
p-brane said:Photons would not be photons if they were at rest. Yes?
selfAdjoint said:Never. "I'm emitted/I'm absorbed. End of story." Now, WE see it as traveling for billions, maybe, of years, but that's us and our relation to it. In its own relation to itself it is timeless. And its path through spacetime is a Null Geodesic, an arc along which proper time is always zero.
p-brane said:However, if I were a photon, with my senses intact, traveling at c I may not notice the time but I would notice the Null Geodesic arc tugging at my relativistic mass as I sped along it.
selfAdjoint said:And its path through spacetime is a Null Geodesic, an arc along which proper time is always zero.
I've never heard of this term (Null Geodesic) and the closest I've come to understanding it is when I read the above quote.selfAdjoint said:Even as a massive object, you don't feel "gravity tugging" as you travel along a geodesic (i.e. fall). You may feel the wind in your face, but astronauts in zero-g and skydivers do not feel gravity.
selfAdjoint said:Even as a massive object, you don't feel "gravity tugging" as you travel along a geodesic (i.e. fall). You may feel the wind in your face, but astronauts in zero-g and skydivers do not feel gravity.
loseyourname said:Okay, back up a little here. What is the distinction that you are drawing between accerelation due to gravity and all other types of acceleration? I mean, g-force or not, I can feel the acceleration when I take my foot off the brake of my car, and it isn't a fast car. Are you basically saying that when an object accelerates due to gravity, because it is simply following the normal curvature of spacetime, that it feels nothing? But if is accelerating due to some other force, it will be felt because it is then not moving along the normal curvature?