@0celo7 : there's plenty of evidence. For example : you know that NIST optical clocks go slower when they're lower. They go slower when they're lower because light goes slower when its lower. See this answer. They don't go slower when they're lower because ju-ju goes slower.
@skill patrol : as you can see above, my method is to provide robust references to back up what I say. But of course some people always find a way to reject them to carry on believing in popscience lies to children.
@Slereah : there's nothing smug or obstinate about answering questions with robust factual references to Einstein and the evidence. Here's an example. But of course, some people here don't like that sort of thing. They'd rather close down questions. And physics chat.
In mathematics, the Cantor function is an example of a function that is continuous, but not absolutely continuous. It is also referred to as the Cantor ternary function, the Lebesgue function, Lebesgue's singular function, the Cantor-Vitali function, the Devil's staircase, the Cantor staircase function, and the Cantor-Lebesgue function. Georg Cantor (1884) introduced the Cantor function and mentioned that Scheeffer pointed out that it was a counterexample to an extension of the fundamental theorem of calculus claimed by Harnack. The Cantor function was discussed and popularized by Scheeffer (1884...
I also like that function because it's absurdly general
In mathematics, the Fox H-function H(x) is a generalization of the Meijer G-function introduced by Charles Fox (1961). It is defined by a Mellin–Barnes integral
where L is a certain contour separating the poles of the two factors in the numerator. Another generalization of Fox H-function is given by Innayat Hussain AA (1987). For a further generalization of this function, useful in Physics and Statistics, see Rathie (1997).
The special case for which the Fox H-function reduces to the Meijer G-function is Aj = Bk = C, C > 0 for j = 1...p and k = 1...q (Srivastava 1984, p. 50):
== References... ==
In mathematics, the Minkowski question mark function (or the slippery devil's staircase), denoted by ?(x), is a function possessing various unusual fractal properties, defined by Hermann Minkowski (1904, pages 171–172). It maps quadratic irrationals to rational numbers on the unit interval, via an expression relating the continued fraction expansions of the quadratics to the binary expansions of the rationals, given by Arnaud Denjoy in 1938. In addition, it maps rational numbers to dyadic rationals, as can be seen by a recursive definition closely related to the Stern–Brocot tree.
== Definition... ==
I found another question that no longer makes sense because of a dead link: physics.stackexchange.com/questions/11029/…?. I have not unilaterally deleted this one because the dead link is not creating spam the way the other one was.
User input is solicited.
user54412
I'm always in favor of pruning the dead stuff.
user54412
I remember flagging such a thing on SO once -- the image-hosting site had replaced the original image with spam -- and having my flag dismissed. I think link-rot has become endemic to certain (most?) internet communities, so many people have come to view fighting it as futile.
@dmckee if anyone is willing to look up an archive of the page (assuming one exists) and edit the question to be independent, that would be one way to save it, but otherwise I'd support deleting it