What is the time dilation effect of the Milky Ways rotation?



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Topic: Science > Physics
User: ""
Date: 03 Apr 2007 11:13:07 AM
Object: What is the time dilation effect of the Milky Ways rotation?
I've been trying to sort this problem out but my knowledge is limited
to finding stuff online like relativity calculators and none of them
are exactly what I'm looking for.
I read an article that said the estimated rotational speed of Earth
relative to the center of the milky way is 230-270 k/s
What kind of time dilation are we looking at over say a billion
years? I realize that at these speeds relativity is a small force
played but I know at much smaller speeds our GPS satellites require
minor adjustments for their relativity. Extend even a small change in
local time perception out over a billion years and I would think there
would be a fairly significant difference in how much time passed at
the core of the galaxy vs Earth. I'm going to say in the area of a
few hundred, maybe a few thousand years.
Can anyone give me a hand with this query?
.

User: "Uncle Al"

Title: Re: What is the time dilation effect of the Milky Ways rotation? 03 Apr 2007 01:09:35 PM
wrote:


I've been trying to sort this problem out but my knowledge is limited
to finding stuff online like relativity calculators and none of them
are exactly what I'm looking for.

I read an article that said the estimated rotational speed of Earth
relative to the center of the milky way is 230-270 k/s

What kind of time dilation are we looking at over say a billion
years? I realize that at these speeds relativity is a small force
played but I know at much smaller speeds our GPS satellites require
minor adjustments for their relativity. Extend even a small change in
local time perception out over a billion years and I would think there
would be a fairly significant difference in how much time passed at
the core of the galaxy vs Earth. I'm going to say in the area of a
few hundred, maybe a few thousand years.

Can anyone give me a hand with this query?

sqrt{1 - [270/(3x10^5 km/sec)]^2} =0.999999595
1,000,000,405 years rim/1,000,000,000 years core. No perceptible
effect.
--
Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/lajos.htm#a2
.
User: "Androcles"

Title: Re: What is the time dilation effect of the Milky Ways rotation? 03 Apr 2007 02:17:54 PM
"Uncle Al" <UncleAl0@hate.spam.net> wrote in message =
news:4612985F.41A4EF96@hate.spam.net...

digitalsaint@gmail.com wrote:

=20
I've been trying to sort this problem out but my knowledge is limited
to finding stuff online like relativity calculators and none of them
are exactly what I'm looking for.
=20
I read an article that said the estimated rotational speed of Earth
relative to the center of the milky way is 230-270 k/s
=20
What kind of time dilation are we looking at over say a billion
years? I realize that at these speeds relativity is a small force
played but I know at much smaller speeds our GPS satellites require
minor adjustments for their relativity. Extend even a small change =

in

local time perception out over a billion years and I would think =

there

would be a fairly significant difference in how much time passed at
the core of the galaxy vs Earth. I'm going to say in the area of a
few hundred, maybe a few thousand years.
=20
Can anyone give me a hand with this query?

=20
sqrt{1 - [270/(3x10^5 km/sec)]^2} =3D0.999999595
=20
1,000,000,405 years rim/1,000,000,000 years core. No perceptible
effect.

What hat did you pull that river of ***** from, stooopid *****-faced =
baboon?
Fucking derive it, you dumb ignorant *****.
Ignorance is educable, stooopidity is forever.
http://www.androcles01.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Smart/Smart.htm
.
User: "Uncle Al"

Title: Re: What is the time dilation effect of the Milky Ways rotation? 03 Apr 2007 04:58:33 PM
Androcles wrote:


"Uncle Al" <UncleAl0@hate.spam.net> wrote in message news:4612985F.41A4EF96@hate.spam.net...

digitalsaint@gmail.com wrote:


I've been trying to sort this problem out but my knowledge is limited
to finding stuff online like relativity calculators and none of them
are exactly what I'm looking for.

I read an article that said the estimated rotational speed of Earth
relative to the center of the milky way is 230-270 k/s

What kind of time dilation are we looking at over say a billion
years? I realize that at these speeds relativity is a small force
played but I know at much smaller speeds our GPS satellites require
minor adjustments for their relativity. Extend even a small change in
local time perception out over a billion years and I would think there
would be a fairly significant difference in how much time passed at
the core of the galaxy vs Earth. I'm going to say in the area of a
few hundred, maybe a few thousand years.

Can anyone give me a hand with this query?


sqrt{1 - [270/(3x10^5 km/sec)]^2} =0.999999595

1,000,000,405 years rim/1,000,000,000 years core. No perceptible
effect.


What hat did you pull that river of ***** from, stooopid *****-faced baboon?
Fucking derive it, you dumb ignorant *****.
Ignorance is educable, stooopidity is forever.
http://www.androcles01.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Smart/Smart.htm

If you are going to plagiarize Uncle Al at least show some intiative
with variety. Hmmm... Androcles in sci.physics is is a eunuch in a
brothel, a capon in a henhouse, a steer amidst cows; a stot, a
gelding, a gelt, a havier, a gib, a lapin, a seg, a hog, a wether... a
critic troll in a science newsgroup.
sqrt[1-(v/c)^2] is beta, the SR dilation factor.
Idiot. If you are going to lave my ***** with your tongue, kindly
brush your teeth first. It's hard to make a comeback when you haven't
been anywhere.
--
Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/lajos.htm#a2
.
User: "Androcles"

Title: Re: What is the time dilation effect of the Milky Ways rotation? 03 Apr 2007 07:49:02 PM
"Uncle Al" <UncleAl0@hate.spam.net> wrote in message =
news:4612CE09.27E459C9@hate.spam.net...

Androcles wrote:

=20
"Uncle Al" <UncleAl0@hate.spam.net> wrote in message =

news:4612985F.41A4EF96@hate.spam.net...

digitalsaint@gmail.com wrote:


I've been trying to sort this problem out but my knowledge is =

limited

to finding stuff online like relativity calculators and none of =

them

are exactly what I'm looking for.

I read an article that said the estimated rotational speed of =

Earth

relative to the center of the milky way is 230-270 k/s

What kind of time dilation are we looking at over say a billion
years? I realize that at these speeds relativity is a small force
played but I know at much smaller speeds our GPS satellites =

require

minor adjustments for their relativity. Extend even a small =

change in

local time perception out over a billion years and I would think =

there

would be a fairly significant difference in how much time passed =

at

the core of the galaxy vs Earth. I'm going to say in the area of =

a

few hundred, maybe a few thousand years.

Can anyone give me a hand with this query?


sqrt{1 - [270/(3x10^5 km/sec)]^2} =3D0.999999595

1,000,000,405 years rim/1,000,000,000 years core. No perceptible
effect.

=20
What hat did you pull that river of ***** from, stooopid *****-faced =

baboon?

Fucking derive it, you dumb ignorant *****.
Ignorance is educable, stooopidity is forever.

[snip river of *****]
=20

sqrt[1-(v/c)^2] is beta, the SR dilation factor.

Ignorance is educable, stooopidity is forever.
beta cannot be derived, you dumb ignorant *****.
http://www.androcles01.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Smart/Smart.htm
.
User: "Eric Gisse"

Title: Re: What is the time dilation effect of the Milky Ways rotation? 03 Apr 2007 07:54:55 PM
On Apr 3, 4:49 pm, "Androcles" <Engin...@hogwarts.physics.co.uk>
wrote:

"Uncle Al" <Uncle...@hate.spam.net> wrote in messagenews:4612CE09.27E459C9@hate.spam.net...

Androcles wrote:


"Uncle Al" <Uncle...@hate.spam.net> wrote in messagenews:4612985F.41A4EF96@hate.spam.net...

digitalsa...@gmail.com wrote:


I've been trying to sort this problem out but my knowledge is limited
to finding stuff online like relativity calculators and none of them
are exactly what I'm looking for.


I read an article that said the estimated rotational speed of Earth
relative to the center of the milky way is 230-270 k/s


What kind of time dilation are we looking at over say a billion
years? I realize that at these speeds relativity is a small force
played but I know at much smaller speeds our GPS satellites require
minor adjustments for their relativity. Extend even a small change in
local time perception out over a billion years and I would think there
would be a fairly significant difference in how much time passed at
the core of the galaxy vs Earth. I'm going to say in the area of a
few hundred, maybe a few thousand years.


Can anyone give me a hand with this query?


sqrt{1 - [270/(3x10^5 km/sec)]^2} =0.999999595


1,000,000,405 years rim/1,000,000,000 years core. No perceptible
effect.


What hat did you pull that river of ***** from, stooopid *****-faced baboon?
Fucking derive it, you dumb ignorant *****.
Ignorance is educable, stooopidity is forever.


[snip river of *****]

sqrt[1-(v/c)^2] is beta, the SR dilation factor.


Ignorance is educable, stooopidity is forever.

beta cannot be derived, you dumb ignorant *****.

I guess I was hallucinating when I thought I had done just that...

http://www.androcles01.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Smart/Smart.htm

.





User: "Sam Wormley"

Title: Re: What is the time dilation effect of the Milky Ways rotation? 03 Apr 2007 03:48:39 PM
wrote:

I've been trying to sort this problem out but my knowledge is limited
to finding stuff online like relativity calculators and none of them
are exactly what I'm looking for.

I read an article that said the estimated rotational speed of Earth
relative to the center of the milky way is 230-270 k/s

What kind of time dilation are we looking at over say a billion
years?

From who's perspective?
.


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