The GPS clock is three minutes slow because there isn't as much gravity around the satellite as there is on the surface, which makes time go by more quickly.
86715 is 2 mins slow. How to correct it.
If you and I stand at Cape Canaveral and set our clocks to coincide, and then you pick up your clock, climb into your dazzling multicolored starship and take off, leaving the launch-pad at close to the speed of light, -- and then I keep watching your clock through my telescope, and you keep watching my clock through your telescope, -- I'll see that compared to my clock, yours is running slow. -- You'll see that compared to your clock, mine is running slow. We'll both be right. I know. It's impossible. It can't be. But it is. It's been demonstrated and measured thousands of times over the last 70 years, in laboratories all over the world.
Evaporation is very slow at converting liquid to gas compared to boiling.
If you put a magnet next to a clock, it can interfere with the clock's magnetic components and disrupt its timekeeping mechanism. This can cause the clock to either slow down or speed up, depending on the specific design and sensitivity of the clock. It is generally recommended to keep magnets away from clocks to maintain their accuracy.
Neptune rotates on its axis at a speed of about 16 hours and 6 minutes, resulting in a relatively slow rotation compared to Earth's 24-hour day. This means that Neptune has a longer day than Earth.
The correct time is 3:35pm when the clock reads 3pm. At 3pm correct time, the clock will have been running slow for 3 hours and be 30 minutes behind, reading 2:30. It will lose an additional 5 minutes to travel the 1/2 hr more, so it would be behind a total of 35 minutes.
730 minutes slow (12.167 hours slow, so basically half a day slow) In other words it would be correct if it didn't say PM or AM.
730 minutes slow
86715 is 2 mins slow. How to correct it.
The clocks would read 16 minutes earlier than the actual factual time. Sadly, you haven't told us what time it really is. Incidentally, a clock can be 16 minutes 'behind', but it can't be 16 minutes 'slow'. If a clock is 'slow', then the amount of time it loses depends on how long it's been running since it was set, and would be expressed in units of "minutes per hour", or some other such dimensionless ratio.
No. It will run 2.45 times as SLOW.
Depends on type. An electrical clock won't care either way. But a plumb-powered clock will be slow.
Bad clock motor, replace!!!
You would do it by adjusting the pendulum. By moving it slightly down, you should slow it down. It may take a while to find the correct length.
If you and I stand at Cape Canaveral and set our clocks to coincide, and then you pick up your clock, climb into your dazzling multicolored starship and take off, leaving the launch-pad at close to the speed of light, -- and then I keep watching your clock through my telescope, and you keep watching my clock through your telescope, -- I'll see that compared to my clock, yours is running slow. -- You'll see that compared to your clock, mine is running slow. We'll both be right. I know. It's impossible. It can't be. But it is. It's been demonstrated and measured thousands of times over the last 70 years, in laboratories all over the world.
Nalunaaqutaq kingulliuvoq.
Time doesn't go by slow. It goes the same speed, its just when your looking at a clock and waiting for something fun ,it goes by slow, but of course when your having fun it goes by fast. Its not the clock its your mind, but you don't control the clock. We all wish we could control it. LOL!