On 01/07/2012 12:37 AM, [email protected] wrote:
Hi Antonio,

"The GPS is very unlikely to give an accurate speed for anything near the
speed of light - for there are many known effects not taken into account
by the GPS protocol.
In the end the OPERA experiment may alert people to the assumptions and
approximations implicit in the GPS."

This wrongfooted me. So please, does the above quoted statement have any
meaning for time-nuts? Don't answer "ask the author of the statement"
please, I
would like to hear the opinion of time-nuts.

In what way is GPS measuring the speed of the neutrions directly? It is
not that you have a GPS receiver riding the neutrions from the starting
site to the finish site... ;-)

The GPS receivers are syncing the reference clocks at both the sites. GPS
can be used for time/freq transfer, and is a well established tool for
that.

I fail to see the meaning of the quoted statement.

It would be quite a fabulous GPS receiver, made up entirely of neutrinos, which would be physically meaningless since the neutrinos does not couple to the GPS signal's photons... especially when being underground throughout the full stretch of the experiment.

Producing even minuscule amounts of neutrinos takes up quite a lot of energy, to say the least.

Cheers,
Magnus

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