Does music sound slower after an aerobic workout?
Does this happen to you - my husband drives to a running trail listening to music. After his run he gets back in the car and the music sounds slower to him! This only happens after running, not if he is just doing errands. Do you have any idea what causes this?
OOHHHHH, we learned this in science class listen up (or read up) maybe this can give you some insight…or i could possibly wrong..i just thought of a connection…well maybe not…i was thinking of classical mechanics to general relativity…oh well..it sounded something like it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_dialation
Time dilation is the phenomenon whereby an observer finds that another's clock which is physically identical to their own is ticking at a slower rate as measured by their own clock. This is often taken to mean that time has "slowed down" for the other clock, but that is only true in the context of the observer's frame of reference. Locally, time is always passing at the same rate. The time dilation phenomenon applies to any process that manifests change over time.
-this sounds something like it?
but their not clocks…but i connected it through timing and speed.
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April 24th, 2007 at 6:42 pm
drugs maybe
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April 24th, 2007 at 6:42 pm
does he have poor blood circulation?
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April 24th, 2007 at 6:43 pm
I think that he is just tired and his brain is not processing sound as well. He should probably talk to a doctor about this; I'll bet it's something related to his oxygen level. Either that or it's just imaginary.
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April 24th, 2007 at 6:52 pm
OOHHHHH, we learned this in science class listen up (or read up) maybe this can give you some insight…or i could possibly wrong..i just thought of a connection…well maybe not…i was thinking of classical mechanics to general relativity…oh well..it sounded something like it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_dialation
Time dilation is the phenomenon whereby an observer finds that another's clock which is physically identical to their own is ticking at a slower rate as measured by their own clock. This is often taken to mean that time has "slowed down" for the other clock, but that is only true in the context of the observer's frame of reference. Locally, time is always passing at the same rate. The time dilation phenomenon applies to any process that manifests change over time.
-this sounds something like it?
but their not clocks…but i connected it through timing and speed.
References :