Tangent of the actual question, but with a spinning object, the parts furthest away from the center of rotation should experience a time shift relative to the parts at the center of rotation, right?
For example a large disk of radioactive material spinning - the radioactivity at the outside edge would decay faster than the radioactivity at the center?
FutureMartian9 t1_j0hpa6e wrote
Reply to Does rotation break relativity? by starfyredragon
Tangent of the actual question, but with a spinning object, the parts furthest away from the center of rotation should experience a time shift relative to the parts at the center of rotation, right?
For example a large disk of radioactive material spinning - the radioactivity at the outside edge would decay faster than the radioactivity at the center?