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by andrepd
3776 days ago
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Absolute velocity does not affect time, simply because there is no such thing as absolute velocity. Relative velocity, though, does. For instance, if you look at a clock on a GPS satellite, moving fast relative to you, you can see it run slower than the one on your wrist. Similarly, someone stationary on the surface of the sun would see us here on earth moving in slow motion. However, someone moving on the satellite would see the clock on the satellite move normally, and us on earth moving in slow motion, because they are on the same frame of reference of the satellite. So no, time does not operate differently on different parts of the universe per se. It all depends on how it's moving relative to the observer. |
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Actually, the general relativity effects of weaker gravitational field dominate the special relativity effects of velocity[1]. So the GPS satellite clock actually runs faster, not slower.
[1] http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~pogge/Ast162/Unit5/gps....