But since the Earth is around four billion years old, the cumulative
effect of this time dilation adds up to a difference of around a year and a half.
Not exact matches
Also, their concept that
time dilattion accounts for the day - epoc disparity is flawed because neither God nor man would be in a frame
of reference where there is enough changing amount
of gravition / acceleration required for the changing
time -
dilation effect.
How about cosmic microwave background radiation,
time dilation in supernovae light curves, the Hubble deep field, the Sunyaev - Zel «dovich
effect, the Integrated Sachs - Wolfe
effect, the hom.ogeneity
of stars and galaxies, etc, etc...
Time slows at that end due to an effect in Einstein's theory of special relativity known as time dilation: Relative to a stationary observer on the ground, time aboard a spacecraft appears to slow down; relative to the spacecraft, time for the observer on the ground seems to speed
Time slows at that end due to an
effect in Einstein's theory
of special relativity known as
time dilation: Relative to a stationary observer on the ground, time aboard a spacecraft appears to slow down; relative to the spacecraft, time for the observer on the ground seems to speed
time dilation: Relative to a stationary observer on the ground,
time aboard a spacecraft appears to slow down; relative to the spacecraft, time for the observer on the ground seems to speed
time aboard a spacecraft appears to slow down; relative to the spacecraft,
time for the observer on the ground seems to speed
time for the observer on the ground seems to speed up.
But even at the speed and altitude
of jet aircraft, the
effects of relativistic
time dilation are tiny — in the Hafele — Keating experiment the atomic clocks differed after their journeys by just tens to hundreds
of nanoseconds.
Experiments at a particle accelerator have confirmed the «
time dilation»
effect predicted by Albert Einstein's special theory
of relativity