Want this question answered?
I'm not sure what you mean, but the theory of relativity explains how time changes depending on your observation point or speed. When you move close to the speed of light, time will work very differently for you. This is called "Time Dilation" and you can read about it on Wikipedia, or see videos in YouTube.
It is definitley not a scientific concept, let alone a time zone like the Prime Meridian or the International Date Line.
The scientific term is a tesseract, or a wrinkle in time, hence the title.
The best description of a scientific theory is the last one that you offered, that it is well tested and it explains a wide range of observation.
No. Scientific theories and laws are two very distinct groups with separate functions. A theory describes a phenomena, while a law explains it. For example, Newton's First Law EXPLAINS why objects in motion stay in motion with the idea of inertia. The theory of evolution DESCRIBES how organisms change over time.
Yes because of pupil dilation
Yes, there can.
Page 265 to 266
A well tested idea that explains and connects a wide range of observations is a scientific theory. This is sometimes confused with a scientific law.
We do experience a form of time dilation in everyday life, but the effects are extremely small. Time dilation occurs due to differences in gravitational potential and velocities. In our daily lives, these differences are relatively insignificant compared to extreme situations, such as near a black hole or moving at speeds close to the speed of light, where the effects of time dilation become much more pronounced.
A combination of characteristics or qualities that form an individual's distinctive character.
Time dilation always occurs, at ANY speed. The reason it was unknown for solong is that it doesn't become noticeable to us at any speed where we have anydaily experience. But as soon as we had atomic clocks capable of measuringinsanely tiny time differences, and began using them to look for time dilation,there it was, right in front of us, all over the place, in just the predicted amounts.