![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: fundamental, problem |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#11
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Bonnie Granat" wrote in message ... "kenseto" wrote in message ... "Bonnie Granat" wrote in message ... Ken Seto wrote: This SR assumption means that a clock second has the same duration (it does not take "longer" for the clock second to happen in the frame traveling very fast) in all frames of reference. I neglected to comment on this adequately in my previous post. All I really wanted to say, though, is this: Unless I am totally mistaken: - It simply *has* to take longer. If it doesn't, where is the time dilation? Without the second taking longer to happen, there is no time dilation, right? Right!!! The traveling clock second has a longer duration (higher absolute time content) :-) No, silly. LESS time. No you are the silly one. The traveling cliock second will have a longer duration than the stay at home clock second. Ken Seto |
| Ads |
|
#12
|
|||
|
|||
|
"kenseto" wrote in message ... "Bonnie Granat" wrote in message ... "kenseto" wrote in message ... "Bonnie Granat" wrote in message ... Ken Seto wrote: This SR assumption means that a clock second has the same duration (it does not take "longer" for the clock second to happen in the frame traveling very fast) in all frames of reference. I neglected to comment on this adequately in my previous post. All I really wanted to say, though, is this: Unless I am totally mistaken: - It simply *has* to take longer. If it doesn't, where is the time dilation? Without the second taking longer to happen, there is no time dilation, right? Right!!! The traveling clock second has a longer duration (higher absolute time content) :-) No, silly. LESS time. No you are the silly one. The traveling cliock second will have a longer duration than the stay at home clock second. You see Bonnie, DRT includes SR as a subset: http://groups.google.com/groups?q=au...includes+SR%22 :-)) Dirk Vdm |
|
#14
|
|||
|
|||
|
Subject: The Fundamental Problem of SR
From: "Robert J. Kolker" Date: 9/1/2003 10:29 AM Central Standard Time Message-id: kenseto wrote: It is not an illusion. This is demonstrated by the twin paradox. The traveling clock second is longer than the stay at home clock seocnd. As it should be. The closer to a light world line the closer the interval should be to zero. If you sit on your arse, your propertime is maximal. If you travel near light speed your proper time is near zero. If a photon could wear a wris****ch it would discover that it could get from here to there in no time flat. Bob Kolker The proper time is the time measured in your -rest frame- and never appears unusual. The yardstick stretched between the stars, just outside your window, appears grossly mis-made, being much too short. The distance between the stars has also become very short, so it doesn't take long to make the trip. If you can keep the rockets running it may take much less than four years to travel the four light years to Alpha Proximi. If you radio back to Earth immediately when you arrive, your signal will nevertheless arrive more than eight years after you left. |
|
#15
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Danny McCarty" wrote in message ... Subject: The Fundamental Problem of SR From: "Bonnie Granat" Date: 8/31/2003 12:18 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: "kenseto" wrote in message ... "Bonnie Granat" wrote in message ... "kenseto" wrote in message ... The Fundamental Problem of SR: SR rejects the notion of absolute time (universal time). This leads to incionsistencies in its description of the processes of nature. For example: SR posits that the speed of light is a universal constant. That implies that a clock second is an interval of absolute (universal) time. That also implies that the passage of a clock second in one frame is the same as the passage of a clock second in another frame. No. If I understand it correctly, It takes "longer" for the the clock second to HAPPEN in the frame traveling very fast, because the light has not only to go UP to the mirror, but also has to travel FORWARD. Greater distance, greater "TIME." But the person traveling WITH the clock doesn't perceive that. That would be the correct description but this is conflicting with the SR assumption that the speed of light is a universal constant To say it's a universal constant is technically incorrect, as I understand it. Nothing can go faster, but light itself can go slower, although that is beside the point here. Light, in other words, doesn't always go at its top speed. which implies that a clock second is an interval of universal time. No, it doesn't. It just says that we have decided to use the distance that light travels as a measure in OUR "clock." We could use the interval between a dog barking if it were reliably regular. It doesn't really matter WHAT is used as the measure. It just so happens that we use light, for reasons that others can explain (I can't). This SR assumption means that a clock second has the same duration (it does not take "longer" for the clock second to happen in the frame traveling very fast) in all frames of reference. In the frame that is traveling, the second seems like a normal second. From the point of view of nontraveling frames, the second seems to take longer. Frankly, it seems to me that the illusion is not in the fact that the second is longer in the traveling person's clock, but rather in the fact that the traveling person thinks the second is the same as it was when he was NOT traveling. He cannot perceive that the second is longer than it was when he was stationary. In other words, we think of the lengthened second as being an illusion perceived by the nontraveling person, when the illusion is really with the traveling person, who cannot perceive that his second is longer than usual. It seems normal to him, but apparently, it is longer to observers. If I understand it correctly, THAT is where any illusion takes place. But I may be mistaken, so let's see if anyone else comments on what I have said. You have stated the fact correctly, but it is NOT an illusion. All physical events, from the decay of elementary particles to the beating of your heart, take longer from the observors viewpoint. The only realistic view is that BOTH observor and observed are correct, in spite of the fact that they give different numbers. There is not contridiction. A more correct title to this thread would be "The Fundamental Cause of Lay Confusion over SR" Right. I realize that it's not an illusion. I was using the word only figuratively to do exactly what you suggest--reflect the lay confusion. -- ___________________________ Bonnie Granat GRANAT EDITORIAL SERVICES http://www.editors-writers.info Overnight service available |
|
#16
|
|||
|
|||
|
Double A It is not an illusion. Fact is Einstein's equivalent
principle tells us acceleration and gravity are the same. Once a spaceship reaches light speed it would be the same as going through the event horizon of a blackhole. DoubleA People aboard a space ship at 94% of "C" are dead. One could say their body parts got to heavy to function. Best to keep in mind matter particles can't ever accelerate to "C" Not even an electron. Bert |
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| how one problem guides the proof of another problem; Kepler Packing Problem and 4 Color Mapping | a_plutonium@hotmail.com | Physics - General Discussion | 12 | February 28th 06 08:32 AM |
| The Fundamental Problem of Physics | Pentcho Valev | Physics - General Discussion | 14 | January 30th 06 12:38 AM |
| The three fundamental Variables and two fundamental Constants of mechanics | Don1 | Physics - General Discussion | 2 | July 4th 05 04:48 PM |
| Relativists develop relativity (was: Fundamental problem of science education) | Pentcho Valev | Physics - General Discussion | 2 | June 24th 05 05:24 PM |
| Fundamental problem of science education | Pentcho Valev | Physics - General Discussion | 5 | June 24th 05 05:26 AM |