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Path: ...!news.mixmin.net!proxad.net!feeder1-2.proxad.net!usenet-fr.net!pasdenom.info!from-devjntp Message-ID: <uYpfZi9bULDfdUdOt9KE8axbAw8@jntp> JNTP-Route: nemoweb.net JNTP-DataType: Article Subject: Re: Oh my God! References: <Ev7wMrtKlxguxDn1RDUke8-o3Zo@jntp> <debcf81d453dedaac9f35667f31172b5@www.novabbs.com> <dbcab17191432903052a469a85e373da@www.novabbs.com> <1de61998192a9d4e4d6efec687c62b30@www.novabbs.com> <WOMRjDAY8iBKeQQK41bKhSsDbuc@jntp> <3a979f4f9989cf1f7c1d34b49e183086@www.novabbs.com> <V_I6UdUDWnhlZ_eHry6gcNL4hZs@jntp> <ebedcee31dda9cd0fced360b79d8b949@www.novabbs.com> <WIuDLYteA4Un7kHAtgG7rIYILfQ@jntp> <7ac7199063f098f087a863887dd17d8d@www.novabbs.com> Newsgroups: sci.physics.relativity JNTP-HashClient: 2fyIICdxFgzbda6Y1YBRn1a7pKk JNTP-ThreadID: _NOMLwbBk0j_174bZ23omUtCEHM JNTP-Uri: https://www.nemoweb.net/?DataID=uYpfZi9bULDfdUdOt9KE8axbAw8@jntp User-Agent: Nemo/1.0 JNTP-OriginServer: nemoweb.net Date: Sat, 28 Sep 24 01:21:59 +0000 Organization: Nemoweb JNTP-Browser: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/129.0.0.0 Safari/537.36 Injection-Info: nemoweb.net; posting-host="e8cbf2474b472b9bb79db3dccb6a856bc1d05409"; logging-data="2024-09-28T01:21:59Z/9039452"; posting-account="4@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@liscati.fr.invalid> Bytes: 2569 Lines: 36 Le 28/09/2024 à 03:10, hitlong@yahoo.com (gharnagel) a écrit : > On Sat, 28 Sep 2024 0:23:18 +0000, Richard Hachel wrote: >> > > Vo=Vr/sqrt(1+Vr²/c²) >> > > >> > > If Vr---> ∞ then Vo=c >> > >> > It doesn't take a degree in mathematics to know that as Vr---> ∞, >>> Vo in your equation approaches zero, not c. >> In France, our experts in mathematics seem to say that >> Vo=Vr/sqrt(1+Vr²/c²) tends towards c. > > I can only see what I see, and I doubt you are being honest. > Don't quote yourself as an "expert" in mathematics because you're > not. Neither are you an expert in relativity. Pffffff... Well... You say that the equation does not tend to c if Vr is infinite. Let's take Vr very large, example Vr=1000c Let's set Vo=Vr/sqrt(1+Vr²/c²) Vo=1000c/sqrt(1+1000²) Vo=(1000/1000.0005)c=0.9999995c And the higher you go, the more it tends to c. R.H.