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Jim Kelley wrote:
If the length of the second were different, then so would be the speed of light ... To see why that is false, refer to Lorentz's transformation for time at a velocity near the speed of light. Time can vary all over the universe while the speed of light remains constant (at least by definition :-). Since time is one dimension for the speed of light, the problem is self-correcting. If tomorrow's second were 1/2 half of today's second, nobody would even notice. If someone used a cesium clock near a black hole to come up with a "standard" second, it would be nowhere near the same length of time as a cesium clock on Earth. Time passes very slowly near the event horizon of a black hole but light keeps on trucking at the speed of light. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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