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No Physical Difference Between the Geocentric Model and the Modern Heliocentric View

Frumious Bandersnatch

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Richard,

Let's consider the Voyager 1 space probe. It is now about 1.55 x 10^10 km from earth. In the geocentric model it now traveling not only outward toward interstellar space but also making a huge circle around the solar system each sidereal day. The circumference of this circle is nearly 10^10 km and the probe now has a sumerluminal velocity wrt the earth. Not only that the probe now has an angular momentum relative to the earth that I calculate to be more that 10^26 N-m-s (~10^25 kg-m^2/s). What is applying the tremendous amount of torque to voyager to cause this enormous and ever increasing angular momentum wrt to the earth?
 
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Dragar

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Richard,

Let's consider the Voyager 1 space probe. It is now about 1.55 x 10^10 km from earth. In the geocentric model it now traveling not only outward toward interstellar space but also making a huge circle around the solar system each sidereal day. The circumference of this circle is nearly 10^10 km and the probe now has a sumerluminal velocity wrt the earth.

Careful. You're using a Galliean transformation when you should be using a Lorentz one.
 
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Frumious Bandersnatch

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Careful. You're using a Galliean transformation when you should be using a Lorentz one.
How does that work in a geocentric universe? How can you use a Lorentz transformation on a superluminal velocity? How can the Voyager probe be accelarated to a superluminal velocity? The whole thing makes no sense to me and I would like a clear explanation from our resident geocentrist on how it could possibly work.
 
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Dragar

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How does that work in a geocentric universe? How can you use a Lorentz transformation on a superluminal velocity?

Because a change of coordinate system can of course be done - and done properly you're not going to end up with faster than light velocities.

Actually, though, I misread your post slightly. You wouldn't require a Lorentz transformation. You'd require a transformation from the inertial frame of the probe to a non-inertial frame. In that case, you'll recall that general relativity kicks in, and we cannot compare velocities of objects except locally. The local velocity of the probe will of course be c (by definition of how things work in general relativity). Trying to compare that velocity to that of the Earth will only get you confused.

(If you're still doubtful, consider the situation of a photon on the event horizon of a black hole. If it's moving radially outward, and toward you (safely positioned some distance away, and stationary with respect to the black hole), what velocity is the photon going, relative to you?)


While RichardT is being unbelievably dense in all this, you can't really criticise a coordinate transformation for being unphysical if you haven't done it properly.
 
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RichardT

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While RichardT is being unbelievably dense in all this, you can't really criticise a coordinate transformation for being unphysical if you haven't done it properly.

Should I just stand up to this name calling nonsense or stop posting here?
 
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Dragar

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You're the one claiming that there is absolute reference frame, which is somehow 'correct', RichardT, and that this picture of the universe includes a swathe of complications to our knowledge of physics that are just such that they make it appear that you are, in fact, simply choosing one complicated reference frame for purely egotistical reasons.

You're also citing papers you don't understand, and refering to ideas that don't quite mean what you think they mean.
 
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Dragar

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For instance, Mach's principle, and the related stuff you've referenced. These things are not saying geocentrism is correct and heliocentrism true. In fact, if you understood their arguments to their conclusion, you'd find that they are arguing all motion, including rotation, is relative (whereas in general rotation is an absolute thing that can be measured). In other words, all coordinate systems - however wacky - are a completely arbitrary choice.

Which is not what geocentrists want to hear.
 
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RichardT

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For instance, Mach's principle, and the related stuff you've referenced. These things are not saying geocentrism is correct and heliocentrism true. In fact, if you understood their arguments to their conclusion, you'd find that they are arguing all motion, including rotation, is relative (whereas in general rotation is an absolute thing that can be measured). In other words, all coordinate systems - however wacky - are a completely arbitrary choice.

I knew this.

Which is not what geocentrists want to hear.

I'd love to hear it.
 
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Dragar

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So you're prepared to concede that there is no reason to think the Earth centred coordinate system is no more 'correct' than any other? And that any statement about the Earth being the 'centre' of the universe, or the solar system, or being stationary, or anything like that, is an essentially empty and meaningless one?
 
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RichardT

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So you're prepared to concede that there is no reason to think the Earth centred coordinate system is no more 'correct' than any other? And that any statement about the Earth being the 'centre' of the universe, or the solar system, or being stationary, or anything like that, is an essentially empty and meaningless one?

Wasn't that what my thread was about in the first place? I've told you why I believed in Geocentricity before. Bible says sun goes around earth.
 
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Dragar

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Wasn't that what my thread was about in the first place? I've told you why I believed in Geocentricity before. Bible says sun goes around earth.

But we've just agreed motion is relative. So the Bible could have said the universe revolves around Pluto, and it would have been just as correct.

Except, does the Bible really mean to say this? Or does it mean to say that the Sun goes around the Earth, and no other perspective is correct?

Either the statement is trivial to the point of being irrelevent, or it's at best meaningless and worst wrong.
 
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NailsII

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Wasn't that what my thread was about in the first place? I've told you why I believed in Geocentricity before. Bible says sun goes around earth.
Havn't we been over this already?
Evidence (and common sense) suggests that the bible is wrong.
There is very little credible evidence to back up your claim, and substantial evidence to suggest that the sun is the centre of our solar system, the earth rotates around it and we are stuck out near the edge of our galaxy in a nondescript area of the universe.
And as for logic, there is no logical reason why being in the centre means anything whatsoever.
What you are proposing really, is that the earth is in the centre of your visable universe as all your measurements are made here - I wager that Voyager I would propose the same theory if it were sentient.....
 
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Gracchus

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But we've just agreed motion is relative.

But acceleration is not relative.

Dragar said:
So the Bible could have said the universe revolves around Pluto, and it would have been just as correct.

Just as correct as π = 3. In the heliocentric solar system, orbital mechanics is adequately explained by the law of gravity: F=Gm(1)m(2)/s^2. What law describes orbital mechanics in a geocentric system?

Dragar said:
Either the statement is trivial to the point of being irrelevent, or it's at best meaningless and worst wrong.

I think the point is that, if we have to revise the laws of physics to accommodate a geocentric solar system it is not physically equivalent to a geocentric system.

:wave:
 
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Loudmouth

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But acceleration is not relative.

My knowledge of relativity is a bit limited so please correct me if I am wrong. GR states that acceleration and gravity are the same. If acceleration is not relative then there is a preferred center of gravity and a preferred center of rotation for a Sun/Earth system.
 
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