This forum has a purpose, and so do I.
I don't suppose it would be worthwhile to actually do this, but as a thought experiment...
Put your treadmill into the back of a van driving a steady 10 mph along a smooth level straight road. Orient the treadmill so that the top of the belt is moving 10 mph backward relative to the van.
In the reference frame of the belt surface, the objects in the room are moving at the same speed as the air. Imagine you put the room in an enclosed trailer, the bottom of which is just microns from the road surface, and cut a hole in the bottom the size of the treadmill belt. Next to it you put an actual treadmill. Now turn on the treadmill and pull the trailer down the road so the surface through the hole is moving at the same speed as the treadmill surface.
Will a vehicle sitting on the road surface through the hole behave differently than one on the treadmill (assuming identical surface characteristics)?
Will the vehicle on the treadmill behave differently if the trailer is stopped?
You must think the answer to one of those is "yes", otherwise, the reference frame of the open road in a wind moving at the speed of the trailer is exactly identical to the frame of the surface through the hole in the trailer, which behaves identically to the treadmill surface in the moving trailer, which in turn behaves identically to the treadmill surface when the trailer is not moving.
So which question do you answer "yes" to, and why?
Not all questions can have a binary outcome.
Entertainment? If not that, I don't know what that purpose might be.
I no longer think you are serious. I think you are now doing the troll thing.
This one does. All 10 judges are going to award me your $100K
The objects in the room relative to the belt. Ok if you get onto the belt, the indeed the world will wizz by. At least two mistakes
1. The relationship between the two remains the same
If one were to take such a step, the the answer is no, not even wrong.
This one does. All 10 judges are going to award me your $100K
Not trolling.
This should have ended, but this is one of the problems.
Alties refuse to yield.
They cause a lot of problems.
So you would answer "no" to both questions, but you disagree with the conclusion? Please just specify which of these you agree to, using my example and two questions:
The answer to question one is "yes".
The answer to question two is "yes".
The answer to both questions is "yes".
The answer to both questions is "no", but that does not imply that the reference frames are equivalent. If this is the case, which step do you have a problem with?
You know Spork. You are going to get into trouble here. I may just let you...if these ideas are the basis of your theories, then I would be certainly be taking candy from a baby.
Equivalence doctrine suggests otherwise, but okay.
You could solve the problem by ending it yourself.
I assume you mean Spork. I don't see why he should yield given that he is clearly, demonstrable correct.
Clearly a problem for you, not so much for anyone else. You seem to be the only person left in the thread that doesn't understand this.
Have it your way. The only people to tell you are right, are yourselves.
This may be your misunderstanding. The relationship remains the same because the vehicle is moving with respect to the belt, and the belt acts like an infinitely long surface, just like the hole in the trailer in my example. The relationship with one point on the belt surface changes constantly, and that point leaves the reference frame of the belt surface when it hits the curve at end of the belt.
Did you read the my description of the other cart?
Do you realise what you must supply.
Proving you are wrong will be easy.
OK. All the explanations I have read, are wrong. They are so very wrong.
I should add that you have made the trolley almost massless.
The frames are the same because there is no relative ACCELERATION.
You forgot that without that there can be no motivating force.
No, this is artifice. Concepts are not real. You have the temerity to say this is where I am wrong. This is so befuddled that yes or no is inappropriate.