absolute velocity उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- In addition, objects don't have a meaningful absolute velocity since there's no single " preferred " reference frame in which light behave properly; you can only talk about objects'velocities relative to other objects.
- However, by geometrising gravitation in the theory of general relativity, it seems to me that Einstein reintroduced absolute velocities for moving objects, through the back door as it were, by reifying space-time as a definite manifold.
- The concept of an absolute velocity, including being " at rest " as a particular case, is ruled out by the principle of relativity, also eliminating any obvious " center " of the universe as a natural origin of coordinates.
- Interpreted a la Glymour, the point is not the naive one that absolute velocity is not measurable-that would be alright-but that it cannot even be computed from measured quantities via any seriously proposed ( let alone well-tested ) hypotheses.
- The decrease in the absolute velocity of the fluid across the two rotor blade rows ( R 1 and R 2 ) is due to the energy transfer; the slight decrease in the fluid velocity through the fixed guide blades ( F ) is due to losses.
- His criticism was that they lead " to asymmetries which do not appear to be inherent in the phenomena . " Whether one assigns an absolute velocity of zero to a conductor and a non-zero velocity to a magnet, or vice versa, the measurable result ( current ) is the same.
- It seems to imply that " absolute velocity is not measurable " is different from " absolute velocity [ . . . ] cannot [ . . . ] be computed from measured quantities " which is nonsense and certainly not something that Einstein believed and it implies that " absolute velocity is not measurable " is an obviously true statement a priori; see Section 16 1 of the " Feynman Lectures on Physics " for a response to that .-- talk ) 11 : 17, 6 August 2009 ( UTC)
- It seems to imply that " absolute velocity is not measurable " is different from " absolute velocity [ . . . ] cannot [ . . . ] be computed from measured quantities " which is nonsense and certainly not something that Einstein believed and it implies that " absolute velocity is not measurable " is an obviously true statement a priori; see Section 16 1 of the " Feynman Lectures on Physics " for a response to that .-- talk ) 11 : 17, 6 August 2009 ( UTC)
- It seems to imply that " absolute velocity is not measurable " is different from " absolute velocity [ . . . ] cannot [ . . . ] be computed from measured quantities " which is nonsense and certainly not something that Einstein believed and it implies that " absolute velocity is not measurable " is an obviously true statement a priori; see Section 16 1 of the " Feynman Lectures on Physics " for a response to that .-- talk ) 11 : 17, 6 August 2009 ( UTC)
- If one considers a moving initial position, or equivalently a moving origin ( e . g . an initial position or origin which is fixed to a train wagon, which in turn moves with respect to its rail track ), the velocity of P ( e . g . a point representing the position of a passenger walking on the train ) may be referred to as a relative velocity, as opposed to an absolute velocity, which is computed with respect to a point which is considered to be'fixed in space'( such as, for instance, a point fixed on the floor of the train station ).