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| Tags: instrinsic, length, object, property |
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#1
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I've seen a number of threads where posters have difficulty with a
basic concept having to do with length. What I hope to do here is to move the point of discussion from length to simultaneity, where it belongs. Length is defined by an agreed-on procedure. It is not an innate property of an object. For an object at rest in the measurer's frame, it's easy. 1. Place a precalibrated ruler alongside the object. 2. Take note of the calibrated mark at one end of the object. 3. Take note of the calibrated mark at the other end of the object. For an object moving in the measurer's frame, though, it's a bit more tricky. 1. Hold up a precalibrated ruler parallel to the object's motion. 2. At a certain time mark, t0, take note of the calibrated mark at one end of the object. 3. At the VERY SAME time mark, t0, take note of the calibrated mark at the other end of the object. Why is this last step so important? A moment's thinking will tell you that if there is a delay between 2 and 3, the object will have moved, sliding along its path. Depending on which direction the object is going, you will end up with a number that is either longer or shorter than the object's length measured if it were at rest. So SIMULTANEITY is key to the definition of length of an object, especially in a frame where the object is moving with respect to the measurer. There is no other workable definition of length other than this operational one. Ah, there's the rub... For once we agree that simultaneity is crucial to the DEFINITION of length, then the real issue is that simultaneity is not something that two measurers moving with respect to each other will agree on. The "relativity" of length is directly attributable to the "relativity" of simultaneity. Now, if folks want to talk about why simultaneity is not an inherent property of two events... PD |
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#2
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Paul Draper wrote:
Length is defined by an agreed-on procedure. It is not an innate property of an object. You are basically discussing variations on a PUN. You fail to distinguish between two different meanings of "length": length(1): the intrinsic length of an object. length(2): the value some observer measures for the length of some object. Mostly you discuss length(2), but occasionally use length(1) and get confused (as above). Yes, length(2) depends on a specified measurement procedure, and for the usual procedure to measure the length of a moving object differently-moving observers can obtain different values for the length(2) of a given object. But an object such as a ruler inherently has a length(1), and this is an intrinsic property of the object. Note, please, that length(1) is an invariant, whereas length(2) is not. [Here I use length(2) in the abstract -- the value from any specific measurement is invariant (as are all measurements). This is sometimes called a frame-dependent invariant.] Note that length(1) is often/usually called "proper length", to avoid this pun. It is defined as the measured value of length(2) performed in the usual way in the object's instantaneously-comoving inertial frame. [...] Tom Roberts |
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#3
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Tom Roberts wrote in message ...
Paul Draper wrote: Length is defined by an agreed-on procedure. It is not an innate property of an object. You are basically discussing variations on a PUN. You fail to distinguish between two different meanings of "length": length(1): the intrinsic length of an object. length(2): the value some observer measures for the length of some object. Mostly you discuss length(2), but occasionally use length(1) and get confused (as above). Yes, length(2) depends on a specified measurement procedure, and for the usual procedure to measure the length of a moving object differently-moving observers can obtain different values for the length(2) of a given object. But an object such as a ruler inherently has a length(1), and this is an intrinsic property of the object. Note, please, that length(1) is an invariant, whereas length(2) is not. [Here I use length(2) in the abstract -- the value from any specific measurement is invariant (as are all measurements). This is sometimes called a frame-dependent invariant.] Note that length(1) is often/usually called "proper length", to avoid this pun. It is defined as the measured value of length(2) performed in the usual way in the object's instantaneously-comoving inertial frame. [...] Tom Roberts I'm not sure I wholly agree with the pedagogical value of this approach. Even in my "interpretation", length(1) is an artifact of it being at rest in the measurer's frame. I think it's very important to get across to folks that the length of an object is a procedural result that HAPPENS to be maximum when the object is at rest with respect to the measurer. Or said just slightly differently, ...that happens to be equal to the invariant interval when the object is at rest with respect to the measurer. Or still differently yet, ... that happens to be equal to the proper length when the object is at rest with respect to the measurer. The problem with the term "proper length" is that it conveys that the definition of length is different or more substantial somehow or more "proper" when the object is at rest, compared to when it is moving. The same would be true if we said the x-component of a 3-vector became more "proper" if the vector had no y or z components. Saying such confuses people and gives them the impression that something dramatic has happened when the vector moves off-axis or we rotate the reference frame. Do you see what I mean? PD |
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