Page:Benton 1959 The Clock Problem (Clock Paradox) in Relativity.djvu/21

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60. Dingle, Herbert.THE TIME CONCEPT IN RESTRICTED RELATIVITY. Am. J. Phys. 10:203-205, Aug. 1942.

Takes issue with Epstein's article on "The time concept in restricted relativity."

61. Dingle, Herbert.THE TIME CONCEPT IN RESTRICTED RELATIVITY. Am. J. Phys. 11:228-230, 1943.

A criticism of Epstein's "misinterpretation" of his opinion relative to time and space.

62. Dingle, Herbert.THE UNDERSTANDING OF RELATIVITY. Nature 122:673-674, Nov. 3, 1928.

Briefly mentions the clock paradox.

63. Donahue, T. M. and Leffert, C. B.THE CLOCK PARADOX AND THE PHYSICS OF DISCONTINUOUS GRAVITATIONAL FIELDS. 25p., figs., Pittsburgh, Pa., University of Pittsburgh, Oct. 1957. (Rpt. 1) (Contract Nonr-624(06))

The motion of the clock as represented in a solution of the clock paradox offered by C. Møller is studied in detail. It is found that in the non-inertial rest frame of the accelerated clock the free clock suffers discontinuities in velocity whenever the "gravitational field" in that frame abruptly changes. Although these discontinuities occur at points of discontinuity of the metric tensor, examination of a case in which the gravitational field is turned on smoothly reveals that the effect is a real one within the framework of the general theory of relativity. By the principle of equivalence it follows that even in a real gravitational field when that field changes in time velocity dependent terms in the acceleration of a particle exist. These become impulsive for abruptly changing fields and can even cause an acceleration in the direction "opposite" to the field.

64. Eddington, A. S.THE MATHEMATICAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY. 2nd. ed., 270p., Cambridge, University Press, 1952.

Rectangular coordinates and time, p.13-16.

65. Eddington, A. S.SPACE, TIME AND GRAVITATION: AN OUTLINE OF THE GENERAL RELATIVITY THEORY. 218p., Cambridge, University Press, 1920.

Effects of velocity on clocks, p.58, 74.

66. Eddington, A. S.THE THEORY OF RELATIVITY AND ITS INFLUENCE ON SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT. 32p., Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1922. (The Romanes Lecture, 1922).

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