Questions tagged [time]
Time is defined operationally to be that which is measured by clocks. The SI unit of time is the second, which is defined to be
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How are rotations invariant by time reversal?
The title summarizes it. I'm confused as to how the anti unitary operators work. If it inverts the signal of the angular momentum and conjugates the rotation operator, I can see why the rotation ...
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$i\epsilon$ prescription for finite systems [closed]
What is physical interpretation of path integral for finite time and finite epsilon (i.e without taking limits time->+-inf, epsilon->0)? Does it mean you are doing some finite temperature qft ...
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What is the difference between material time derivative and total time derivative of a tensor field? [closed]
I consider material coordintes as $(X_1(t),X_2(t),X_3(t),t_0),$ ($t_0$ arbitrary) and space coordinates as
$(x_1(t),x_2(t),x_3(t),t).$
$\textbf{Remark.}$ I am interested just in dim=3.
We consider a ...
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Relation between energy and time
I would like help in understanding something that has been causing me a lot of trouble recently: Why is energy always related to time in physics?
Examples include the 4-momentum, the energy-time ...
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Continued calibration of atomic clocks
First off I am not well versed in physics, but as I understand things the second is defined by the ceasium fountain clock which is calibrated as follows How was the first atomic clock calibrated?. Now ...
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Do clocks tick faster when gravitational forces are weaker?
A professor last year taught us that "gravity slows clocks," when teaching about the relationship between gravity and time. This led me to think about places, such as intergalactic space, ...
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Probabilistic behavior of quantum mechanics [closed]
In a hypothetical scenario, if I were to measure the quantum spin of an electron and it showed "up," and then I traveled back in time without changing the initial conditions, would measuring ...
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Does Hamilton's principle allow a path to have both a process of time forward evolution and a process of time backward evolution?
This is from Analytical Mechanics by Louis Hand et al. The proof is about Maupertuis' principle. The author seems to say that Hamilton's principle allow a path to have both a process of time forward ...
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How exactly did Harrison's chronometer circumvent the impulse problem of time-keeping on a moving ship?
According to folklore, around the time of the exploration of the New World, there was a quandary regarding how to measure time on the open sea. Time keeping then was based on the pendulum clock, which ...
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Multiple time dimensions in the eternal inflation model
From a lecture by Prof. Kaiser, I reckoned that according to the Eternal Inflation model, it is possible that all of the 10500 topologies posited by string theory could exist somewhere in the region ...
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Extrapolating time to infinity for a particle moving spirally outward
If I have a particle moving radially away from me in a straight line and I extrapolate time to infinity, I could see the particle in a particular direction (given enough time for the light to reach me)...
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Could chaos theory and butterfly theory prove that time only exists in the present? [closed]
I am sorry if this were to sound dumb but, chaos theory is about reconizing patterns and the universe itself can only repeat it self
, would that mean that time only exist in the present cause if time ...
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If time reversal symmetry was preserved would past and future notions be defined
If time reversal symmetry was preserved would someone be able to define future as a time interval from a given time moment as measured by a clock (assuming they would still function as normal)?
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Gravitational time dilation near the Earth [closed]
I recently read the statement that near the Earth, in the Newtonian weak gravitational field, gravity is 99.9999% mainly due to "curvature of time" (ie gravitational time dilation), and only ...
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Does it make sense to talk about time in absence of matter? [duplicate]
The equations of general relativity should predict (although I might be wrong) that in absence of mass the spacetime is everywhere flat. That is, time is the same everywhere. However, I'm not sure ...