Space missions are about to get very complicated. — David Solman
They will leave for a 50 year trip (for example) and hundreds and hundreds of years could have past here on earth, because of the time dilation their clock will move slower than ours due to the speed at which they would be traveling. — David Solman
If the trip takes 50 years (ship time), they're not exactly expecting to see their relatives again anyway. Human life span is not that long. So why is this a problem? A trip like that can only be one way. You kiss your family goodbye.Those people that leave earth for this trip will never see anyone they know from earth again due to time dilation. They will leave for a 50 year trip (for example) and hundreds and hundreds of years could have past here on earth, — David Solman
Earth does not accelerate away. That would require a massive force on Earth, sending it out of the solar system.Not necessarily. Because of Special Theory of Relativity's Receprocity one can say that Earth is accelerating away from the spaceship, so it is the clocks in the Earth that are slowing down. — Rich
Earth does not accelerate away. That would require a massive force on Earth, sending it out of the solar system. — noAxioms
— Rich
Earth does not accelerate away. That would require a massive force on Earth, sending it out of the solar system....because of Special Theory of Relativity's Receprocity one can say that Earth is accelerating away from the spaceship, — Rich
All true, but again, I was talking about your use of 'acceleration'. In no frame does Earth accelerate beyond its annual wobble around the sun. It would be quite the science fiction story if it did (and yes, I've read such stories).Earth might be moving away from the ship, but it is not ever accelerating away from it.
— noAxioms
There is no privileged frame of reference under STR? Either viewpoint is coherent according to STR. STR doesn't allow for exceptions when it is convenient for a science fiction story. — Rich
Completely false. You seem to not understand the distinction between velocity and acceleration. — noAxioms
earth doesn't experience any acceleration what so ever. — David Solman
Reciprocity of Special Relativity says there is no privileged frame of reference. If there is a privileged frame of reference, STR is wrong and Einstein's T is wrong. There is no T in GTR.I didn't mention a frame, privileged or otherwise. I was commenting on your statement about Earth accelerating. — noAxioms
Special relativity only applies to inertial frames of reference - those that are not accelerating relative to each other. — T Clark
If, on the other hand, there are two space ships at rest relative to each other and one accelerates away from the other up to a significant fraction of c then turns around and comes back and then the clocks are checked, both will observe that less time has passed on the accelerating ship. — T Clark
The Earth is not accelerating? Are you sure about this?
How does someone on the Earth know that they are not accelerating from the spaceship? — Rich
Yes, I'm sure the earth is not accelerating. F = ma. If no force is applied, there is no acceleration. — T Clark
And where does such a condition exist in the universe? — Rich
Clocked may be affected by acceleration (but which one?) — Rich
...this has nothing to do with biological aging. — Rich
...In any case, there had to be deceleration somewhere to even check the clocks. — Rich
Reciprocity of Special Relativity says there is no privileged frame of reference. If there is a privileged frame of reference, STR is wrong and Einstein's T is wrong. There is no T in GTR
-- Rich
I didn't mention a frame, privileged or otherwise. I was commenting on your statement about Earth accelerating.
— noAxioms — T Clark
More or less, yes.If two space ships travelling a significant fraction of the speed of light (c), but not accelerating, pass each other going opposite directions and check each other's clocks, each will observe that the other's clock has slowed down.
If, on the other hand, there are two space ships at rest relative to each other and one accelerates away from the other up to a significant fraction of c then turns around and comes back and then the clocks are checked, both will observe that less time has passed on the accelerating ship.
This is called the "clock problem" or "twin paradox." Look Twin Paradox up on Wikipedia and you'll see the kind of unsatisfying explanation I was talking about. Please don't think I think that "unsatisfying" is the same as "wrong."
The guy in the ship is plastered into his seat when doing the massive acceleration. The guy on Earth is not. OK, a black-hole sort of gravitational field could do that to Earth, but there is none in the scenario discussed.How does someone on the Earth know that they are not accelerating from the spaceship? — Rich
Trival acceleration to non-relativistic speeds that cancel out over a year. See the part about the wobble around the sun I posted above.The Earth is accelerating. It is always accelerating (remember gravity?). — Rich
Clocks can be unambigously compared when in each other's presence, and need not be stationary relative to each other. In short, you can look at each other as you pass by at speed if you like.In any case, there had to be deceleration somewhere to even check the clocks. — Rich
See above. Comparisons of spatially separated clocks are ambiguous and yield different answers depending on the reference frame chosen. The radio doesn't help. This ambiguous ordering is the best explanation of the twins experiment.Why is that? We can just get on the radio and ask what time it is. — T Clark
The Earth is accelerating. It is always accelerating (remember gravity?). — Rich
I didn't like the wording of this part. Each clock is dilated slower in the frame of the other, but that cannot be directly observed.What's the "less" part? — T Clark
They only get one peek at each other's clocks as they pass. You can't observe the dilation. If you're watching a moving clock, it appears to run faster if it is approaching. The Doppler effect is far more significant than the dilation.If two space ships travelling a significant fraction of the speed of light (c), but not accelerating, pass each other going opposite directions and check each other's clocks, each will observe that the other's clock has slowed down.
They only get one peek at each other's clocks as they pass. You can't observe the dilation. If you're watching a moving clock, it appears to run faster if it is approaching. — noAxioms
If you want to get picky, the Earth revolves about its axis, not the sun. It orbits the sun. — noAxioms
Right. It will flash faster as it approaches and slower after it goes by. This is why Andromeda is blue shifted when we look at it. Relativity says it should be a little red shifted since it's processes are slower in our frame. Point is, you're not getting accurate timings when you're not in the presence of the source of the signal. You can compute the delay if you know the distance, but the distance to the source is frame dependent, so still ambiguous.I think this is not correct. Why do I only get one peek? Let's say the clock on the ship is constructed to flash a light at an established frequency. I can just measure the times between flashes as it passes. — T Clark
Fair enough. I got this from http://wikidiff.com/revolve/orbit:I love being picky. It is appropriate to say that he Earth revolves around the sun. In the definition of revolve I looked up, it was one of the examples used. It would also be appropriate to say the Earth revolves around it's axis, but I would probably use "rotate."
As verbs the difference between revolve and orbit is that revolve is (label) to orbit a central point while orbit is to circle or revolve around another object. — wikidiff
Because of Special Theory of Relativity's Receprocity one can say that Earth is accelerating away from the spaceship, so it is the clocks in the Earth that are slowing down. — Rich
Right. It will flash faster as it approaches and slower after it goes by. — noAxioms
For simplicity, assume it is coming directly at you/directly away. No angles to complicate it.I'm thinking about this and I'm not sure. Why would the rate of flashing be different when it is approaching vs. moving away from me? The only difference I can see is that, as it gets closer to me, the angle between my line of sight and the direction of travel increases. — T Clark
Same thing. See the example above with the sun. Let's say it flashes 10 times a minute (every 6 seconds).Still don't understand. This should have nothing to do with Doppler. That changes the wavelength of the light but won't change the frequency of the flash. — T Clark
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