The trouble with this, as you would find if you watch the other video, is that the same "paradox" is observed in a (thought) experiment in which acceleration plays no part. — tim wood
I have a question for you. I was told acceleration or the application of force on the male twin is what solves the twin paradox. Please explain. — Michael Lee
Would like to get your responses to my responses to you from those other posts yesterday..... — Edgar L Owen
I could not make any sense of the new method. — noAxioms
I could not make any sense of the new method. — noAxioms
Can you point me to this simple proof against it? — noAxioms
Or to some sort of reason why the standard relativistic view (per Einstein) is unreasonable? — noAxioms
There need be no signal received to calculate the apparent age of a relatively moving clock. It's a simple calculation in a Minkowski diagram dĪ = â(dt^2 â dx^2). — Edgar L Owen
Normally (in most but not all methods) the signal transit time is ignored when the proper time of a moving clock is computed. — Edgar L Owen
And, sure both perspectives are correct in their frames. The difference is that her's is actual because she just looks at her comoving clock and reads the time, while his is apparent or observational because he from a distance in a different state of motion has a perspective view. He's not actually there reading her time on her clock. — Edgar L Owen
It's what he computes or would see disregarding the time lag of light traveling between them. — Edgar L Owen
It's her apparent age in his reference frame as opposed to her actual age in her own reference frame.
Yes but of course this is only how the space twin VIEWS the aging of his earth twin. That doesn't affect the actual aging rate of the earth twin in the least which goes on completely as normal unaffected by how anyone else views it. — Edgar L Owen
[...] in general relatively moving observers each view the time on each other's clocks ticking slower than their own. — Edgar L Owen
I would agree that her heartbeats continually in his absence, so she must always have a well defined biological age. — Devans99
I wonder if anything could be deduced by a constant, mutual, radio broadcast of each other's heartbeats to each other. That would allow verification of the existence of the other twin and also act as sort of body clock by which they might be able to judge each others relative speeds of ageing.
Maybe even quantum entanglement could be used to transmit, instantaneously this time, the beat of each other's hearts. — Devans99
I am not sure I understand the problem. Is it that situations can arise in which one person, Jill, has apparent evidence that James has aged more slowly than she, and James will have apparent evidence that Jill has aged more slowly than he?
If so, that as it stands is not really a problem as such, for we can simply say that one of them is mistaken. They may both be equally justified in their beliefs, nevertheless, one of them is incorrect. — Bartricks