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| as you get older, it 'seems' that time passes all the more quickly,remembering back to when i was a kid, the summer hols was ages and my whole childhood seemed a lifetime in itself.. Mindst i am not that old now. the technical bit,T= 1/f, where T is time and f is frequency, mains frequency is 50hz (50 times a second) 1 divided by this gives the periodic time, which is equal to 20ms.transposing this back f= 1/t, so 1/20ms = 50.because are brains are using electrical signals etc, could this same rule apply, the mains frequency was just an example.when frequency increases the periodic time intervals are faster. Now maybe only maybe, when we were in our childhood years we have a set frequency, to experience time as it was then, then the change to adulthood causes a slight frequency increase so time 'appears' to go faster as we get older, maybe the patterns change through different times in our life, some days drag or go quick, or some decades fly by, then things slow down again, just a thought for my blog
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| as you get older, it 'seems' that time passes all the more quickly,remembering back to when i was a kid, the summer hols was ages and my whole childhood seemed a lifetime in itself.. Mindst i am not that old now. the technical bit,T= 1/f, where T is time and f is frequency, mains frequency is 50hz (50 times a second) 1 divided by this gives the periodic time, which is equal to 20ms.transposing this back f= 1/t, so 1/20ms = 50.because are brains are using electrical signals etc, could this same rule apply, the mains frequency was just an example.when frequency increases the periodic time intervals are faster. Now maybe only maybe, when we were in our childhood years we have a set frequency, to experience time as it was then, then the change to adulthood causes a slight frequency increase so time 'appears' to go faster as we get older, maybe the patterns change through different times in our life, some days drag or go quick, or some decades fly by, then things slow down again, just a thought for my blog
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| as you get older, it 'seems' that time passes all the more quickly,remembering back to when i was a kid, the summer hols was ages and my whole childhood seemed a lifetime in itself.. Mindst i am not that old now. the technical bit,T= 1/f, where T is time and f is frequency, mains frequency is 50hz (50 times a second) 1 divided by this gives the periodic time, which is equal to 20ms.transposing this back f= 1/t, so 1/20ms = 50.because are brains are using electrical signals etc, could this same rule apply, the mains frequency was just an example.when frequency increases the periodic time intervals are faster. Now maybe only maybe, when we were in our childhood years we have a set frequency, to experience time as it was then, then the change to adulthood causes a slight frequency increase so time 'appears' to go faster as we get older, maybe the patterns change through different times in our life, some days drag or go quick, or some decades fly by, then things slow down again, just a thought for my blog
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a nanosecond to a second is what a second is like to 30 years!
1x10-9, si units, 1 nanosecond is one billionth of a second, or there abouts,so if we live for around 3 billion seconds approx 1 century, in the higher time domains its less then a blink of an eye, ie geological changes etc. as is true for us when trying to comprehend nanoseconds.If living organisms last for 1 second in that time domain,frequency dependent, i suppose it is 30 years approximatley realized of real time with respect to ours.
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a nanosecond to a second is what a second is like to 30 years!
1x10-9, si units, 1 nanosecond is one billionth of a second, or there abouts,so if we live for around 3 billion seconds approx 1 century, in the higher time domains its less then a blink of an eye, ie geological changes etc. as is true for us when trying to comprehend nanoseconds.If living organisms last for 1 second in that time domain,frequency dependent, i suppose it is 30 years approximatley realized of real time with respect to ours.
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a nanosecond to a second is what a second is like to 30 years!
1x10-9, si units, 1 nanosecond is one billionth of a second, or there abouts,so if we live for around 3 billion seconds approx 1 century, in the higher time domains its less then a blink of an eye, ie geological changes etc. as is true for us when trying to comprehend nanoseconds.If living organisms last for 1 second in that time domain,frequency dependent, i suppose it is 30 years approximatley realized of real time with respect to ours.
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