Tumbleweed
Muse
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2006
- Messages
- 555
Please don't use the word reality here. It looks horrible. Even if we remove that word, that sentence still looks strange. The traveling twin changed his frame of reference by changing his velocity, not by changing his position.
No, time dilation is symmetrical here. If both of the twins say "my brother's aging slower than me", they're both right. The reason why this symmetry doesn't cause a paradox is that something else entirely happens when the rocket turns around. It's not a physical effect. It's just a change of coordinates. I explained these things earlier in the thread (starting with post #239, near the end of page 6).
(And it's just as correct to say that the Earth is speeding away from the rocket. That's just the same set of events described from a different inertial frame).
I do not understand , if one twin is obviously older than the other, how both can claim "my brother is aging slower than me". That would be the expected outcome if symmetry ruled, but the reality of both being together again, floating through space at the same velocity here on earth, is that only one has aged slower. Now they will age at the same rate.
When they did that experiment flying an atomic clock around to test relativity, did both clocks claim the other one was slow? Or was one now ahead of the other