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Path: ...!news.nobody.at!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!pasdenom.info!from-devjntp Message-ID: <oEpFQDJJhcpYoGFheTTVIKntZUE@jntp> JNTP-Route: news2.nemoweb.net JNTP-DataType: Article Subject: Re: Incorrect mathematical integration References: <EKV4LWfwyF4mvRIpW8X1iiirzQk@jntp> <v7h59v$3mabh$1@dont-email.me> <UqTpLIJxvD4VcXT01kWm7g9OGtU@jntp> <v7jnc7$7jpq$1@dont-email.me> <KRDL-sfeKg0KUbMuUiMzTEhYDwk@jntp> <v7mc8d$pmhs$1@dont-email.me> <9w4qQAYIGHNeJtHg4ZR1m_Ooxo4@jntp> <v7p7bu$1cd5m$1@dont-email.me> Newsgroups: sci.physics.relativity JNTP-HashClient: ZhnEWg44uWF7MkPFobd1BuQisZU JNTP-ThreadID: Ptg0buW51I-Cbbzx-mVW15r6pQg JNTP-Uri: http://news2.nemoweb.net/?DataID=oEpFQDJJhcpYoGFheTTVIKntZUE@jntp User-Agent: Nemo/0.999a JNTP-OriginServer: news2.nemoweb.net Date: Tue, 23 Jul 24 22:19:55 +0000 Organization: Nemoweb JNTP-Browser: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/126.0.0.0 Safari/537.36 Injection-Info: news2.nemoweb.net; posting-host="e8cbf2474b472b9bb79db3dccb6a856bc1d05409"; logging-data="2024-07-23T22:19:55Z/8961848"; posting-account="4@news2.nemoweb.net"; mail-complaints-to="julien.arlandis@gmail.com" JNTP-ProtocolVersion: 0.21.1 JNTP-Server: PhpNemoServer/0.94.5 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-JNTP-JsonNewsGateway: 0.96 From: Richard Hachel <r.hachel@wanadou.fr> Bytes: 2302 Lines: 26 Le 23/07/2024 à 23:29, "Paul.B.Andersen" a écrit : > Den 22.07.2024 23:37, skrev Richard Hachel: > Give it up, Richard. > The physicists at CERN measures that the proton 'rotates' > 11.25 thousand times per second, you "tell them that the proton > rotates 78 million times per second." > > Is the calculation (78 million)/(11.25 thousand) = 6933/1 too hard > for you? Please, Paul, don't be offensive. Don't tell me you don't understand that the proton rotates 11.25 million times per second in the laboratory frame but 78 million times per second in the proton frame. All you have to do is grab a proton, authoritatively stick a watch on its wrist, and ask it how many times it spins per second. This is called time dilation. Don't make me think you don't know. R.H.