John Freestone
Graduate Poster
Not in the southern hemisphere, where they hang upside down.Careful: if we translate the treadmill situation back to real life, we'll see ground all round the cart moving forwards at wind speed.
I agree, from my humble position of utter ignorance.But this really is irrelevant. We might just as well say that the fact that there's a ceiling in the room and not in the open air has an influence, or that it makes a difference if somebody is standing next to the machine. The essential point in the treadmill test is that local conditions around the cart on the treadmill are exactly the same as they are around a cart on the road running downwind.
Look, this is bugging me, so I'll just come out and say it. I keep getting stuff wrong, and now I'm trying to just either ask questions or clearly say "I imagine...", etc. I am asking reasonable questions, I think, and I am even making statements about the system under consideration that are true. It's hard trying to take part in a discussion with experts. I'm not sure sometimes if it's worth it. I don't know whether it would be better to ban anyone who hasn't got relevant qualifications and then just get on with it. I'm not quite sure, with all the mathematical proof I keep being reminded of, why anyone is interested in building anything or discussing any physical manifestations of the maths. It would be nice, when I ask a question, if it was just answered, rather than being 'corrected'. It would be nice if, when I make a correct statement, it was occasionally agreed with before being pronounced irrelevant. I don't know, perhaps I'm just a human being, wanting a little appreciation and encouragement.
Furthermore, I have a feeling that the reason why building things is important is because the maths we're all supposed to go off and check describes reality as demonstrated, not the other way round. I think you'll find that is why Eddington bothered to go off and see if starlight was shifted by the gravity of the sun, rather than just putting a headline in the paper: "Einstein proves Newton not quite right. I've checked the maths".
Yes, but Einstein made a big fuss about the importance of imagination, and it is often having a picture in our heads, rather than being able to balance equations, that inspires the technoligical uses of discoveries. The maths describing the way a bicycle works - did someone work it all out on paper and then invent the thing to demonstrate it?Many people who can't "intuitively" see how the thing can work start imagining all sorts of possible complex influences, from vibrations, turbulence or whatever. In fact the physics behind it is simple. We have a good understanding of how propellors work, and more than a century of evidence that they do work on aeroplanes. Once we realise that a propellor is just a device for moving through air (or for moving air past it, which really does amount to the same thing), we can analyse the cart with classic Newtonian mechanics. The analysis shows that it works, just as clearly as an analysis of a bicycle shows that it works.