Path: ...!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!news.dfncis.de!not-for-mail From: Luigi Fortunati Newsgroups: sci.physics.research Subject: Experiments on the validity of Relativity Date: 13 May 2024 06:58:16 GMT Organization: A noiseless patient Spider Lines: 40 Approved: hees@itp.uni-frankfurt.de (sci.physics.research) Message-ID: X-Trace: news.dfncis.de jJZ7aR1+RfwZ3rF6xOJhNgTPPc4xUzqL0AYAI8GfdHv0ExizBCPPiIqr7JLYYr7C2W Cancel-Lock: sha1:nHa9jhs5snHErxOzm/GCLMxDKZI= sha256:6ELXZdF5HXtby1JRvKSZM/GAZIpmykJkQe57fPu2pL8= Bytes: 2239 When there is an experiment that proves Einstein right, the whole world is ready to praise him and his theories (and rightly so). However, it is not right that, when an experiment proves Einstein wrong, no one admits it and no one talks about it. Einstein says that bodies in free fall are at rest and that the man inside the falling elevator experiences no forces or accelerations. I have demonstrated in every possible way (with well-illustrated thought experiments via Geogebra) that it is a huge mistake, because two massive bodies (which fall gravitationally and freely towards each other) *accelerate* both in the reference of one and both in that of the other. Therefore, they are accelerated reference systems and not at rest. Both! This is regarding acceleration. It is even easier for the forces to demonstrate the error. Is the elevator plummeting towards a black hole in free fall? Of course yes: it is in free fall. In such conditions, Einstein says that the man inside this free-falling elevator does not suffer any force while (we all know!) the force is there and (even) tears him to pieces together with the elevator! No one has ever been able to dispute this colossal error (that bodies in free fall are at rest) because it is indisputable. And then, rather than admit the correctness of my statement, you all preferred not to talk about it at all, because the flaws of Relativity are better kept hidden. It is not very courageous to boast about the successes of a theory and systematically hide the failures. Luigi Fortunati