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Relativity - Oh dear, here we go again!

Yes: What is the experimental basis of Special Relativity?





Lots of problems, e.g.
  • Particle accelerators do not work unless you account for SR effects in their design.
  • GPS does not work unless you account for SR effects in its design.
Do particle accelerator actually work? How’s that hugely expensive hadron collider coming along? :D <<< NOTE

I meant what was the original problem(s) not how it has been used since.
 
Do particle accelerator actually work? How’s that hugely expensive hadron collider coming along? :D <<< NOTE

I meant what was the original problem(s) not how it has been used since.
Read History of special relativity.
The basic problem that Lorentz, etc. worked on for many years was that Maxwell's equations do not look the same for moving observers. Note that Einstein's 1905 paper is actually about the electrodynamics of moving bodies.
 
I didn’t say the clock would appear to run at a slower rate. I said it would appear to be showing time one second slower than it actually showed because the information took a second to reach the observer. The observation would be time delayed by one second.

It's not just a question of appearances - one twin comes back younger.

Perhaps a better analogy is to think of odometers attached to two cars (this analogy relates the odometer to a clock: one measures distance traveled through space, and the other "distance" traveled through time). The two cars can leave some location, travel on two different paths, and return to the same point. If the two paths are of different lengths, the cars will come back with two different odometer readings - one car is "older" than the other.

What Einstein taught us is that the same type of phenomenon occurs for travel through time as well. Not only will the odometers of the two cars read differently, the clocks they carry will as well. That experiment has been done - there is no question as to its validity (you could try to argue that relativity is not the explanation, but you cannot deny that moving clocks run slow). In fact these effects are observed routinely in satellites, for example in the GPS system, as well as in airplanes. Atomic clocks are far more accurate than is necessary to detect this effect (which is small, but not that small).
 
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Do you understand “According to Relativity the twins experience different realities of time” any better if I say they experience different “proper” times?
Ok, that's clearer.

I also don’t understand what you mean. What path did the “stay home” twin travel if it stayed home?
She still travelled forward through time to the moment where the other twin returned.

A and B are on a long conveyor belt travelling at 2X. B travels against the motion of the belt at X and is still travelling in the same direction as A but at half the speed. B then travels back to A at X and 2X (the speed of the belt). When A and B are back together the net result of the speed and distance they have both independently travelled is exactly equal. B always travelled in the same direction as A and never “turned around“. Given it can’t be said that the “stay home” twin is actually stationary in an absolute or universal sense how can it be said that both twins don’t travel exactly the same distance and speed as A and B did on the belt? Relatively stationary isn’t absolutely stationary and acceleration can’t be correctly (absolutely) defined as being either an increase or decrease in speed.
Hmm, this should probably be adressed by one of the more knowledgeable posters, but I will try to answer it.

If you simply measure the distance between the starting point and end point of their movements, A and B obviously have travelled the same distance. But if you measure the actual lengths of the paths they travel (so that 1m forward + 1m back = 2m), then A:s path will be longer. This should be true as long as any inertial coordinate system is used, even in Newtonian mechanincs.

The same thing happens to the twins in special relativity. Measuring the lengths of the paths they travel through space-time will show you that the twin in the space-ship takes a path which is shorter in the time-dimension, meaning that she will be younger. Note that all inertial coordinate systems will agree on this, even if they will disagree on the distance between the starting-point (spaceship leaves) and end-point (spaceship returns) of the twin's journey.
 
About that conveyor belt...

Let's choose the inertial coordinate system in which the conveyor belt is at rest and B starts moving in the positive x direction with speed u at the event with coordinates (t,x)=(0,0). The speed of the belt relative to the ground is irrelevant (assuming it's constant).

What's A's path through spacetime during the next T seconds on his own clock? It's the path that we would describe as the straight line from (0,0) to (T,0) if we use this particular coordinate system. What's B's path through spacetime between the same two events? It's the one that we would describe as consisting of two straight line segments, the first from (0,0) to (T/2,uT/2) and the second from (T/2,uT/2) to (T,0), if we use the same coordinate system again.

The proper time of any path (through spacetime) between these two events is

[latex]\int\sqrt{dt^2-dx^2}=\int_0^T dt\sqrt{1-\frac{dx^2}{dt^2}}=\int_0^T dt\sqrt{1-v^2}[/latex]

where t and x are the temporal and spatial coordinates of the coordinate system discussed above. The proper time integral is completely independent of the coordinates we use (the proof of that involves math), but the calculation is the easiest when we use that particular coordinate system. (That's the only reason we're using it).

For A, we have v=0 from t=0 to t=T. For B, we have v=u from t=0 to t=T/2 and v=-u from t=T/2 to t=T. So the proper times τA and τB of the paths of A and B are

[latex]\tau_A=T\sqrt{1-0^2}=T[/latex]

[latex]\tau_B=\frac T 2\sqrt{1-u^2}+\frac T 2\sqrt{1-(-u)^2}=T\sqrt{1-u^2}[/latex]

These are the times displayed by their own clocks, and it's also the times by which they have aged between the two events.
 
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I didn’t say the clock would appear to run at a slower rate. I said it would appear to be showing time one second slower than it actually showed because the information took a second to reach the observer. The observation would be time delayed by one second.

Yeah but the rate of time/change is constant until they move in different frames of reference. This sidebar does not effect anything.
 
When I tell a theist that I don’t accept their claim that a god exists they invariably start quoting from the bible. This is totally pointless as the bible is only valid if a god exists. When I tell people that I don’t accept Relativity because I can’t accept some of the basic building blocks it’s constructed on then it’s equally pointless to use Relativity to validate the building blocks.

Hmmm, then how do you explain the difference in rates of passge of time for cesium clocks in orbit? That is one of the data points that agrees with time dialation. Clocks in sperate frames of reference do show small time dialation effects relative to clocks on the earth and they are in agreement with the theory.

That validates a building block right there. It demonstrates something that looks like time dialation.

:)
 
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I can’t see them as being similar at all so I don‘t get the analogy.

ETA - Perhaps I should say that I can see that the claimed effects of Relativity are similar to the actual effects of perception and observation anomalies. In fact to me Relativity seems to take the effects of perception and observation anomalies and claim they are actual and lasting effects on things.


Really then why do the cesium clocks show the time dialation?
 
More ice cream is eaten in summer months and more murders are committed in summer months. This doesn’t mean that eating ice cream turns people in to murderers.

As I said earlier in the thread - “From a sceptical perspective Relativity seems to use a lot of terms that are “user friendly”. I don’t think this is any form of conscious conspiracy but perhaps there is an ongoing subconscious confirmation bias. Collective subconscious confirmation bias could also apply to experimental data (I know it’s not likely but it‘s possible). Not every academic in the world accepts Relativity or the experiments that are claimed to prove it (I‘m not an academic).

I also said - “It’s most likely however that I simply don’t fully understand the language and how it’s correctly applied to reality”.

Excuse me?

We are not talking about a correlative measure of .65 here.

We are talking about .99999999 which is much higher.

Science uses approximate models, none of them are 'real'. So by your standard all science is hooey.

The issue is that you just want to assert that you are right.

The approximate model of relativity makes very accurate predictions, it is not in the ice cream causes drowning category. It is in the approximate model category, if you do not like it then you know what the solution is? Come up with a more accurate approximate model that makes a better prediction.

What your argument is saying is exactly the same as saying

"Germ and virus theory of infection could be the product of ongoing subconscious confirmation bias."

"The pancreatic theory of diabetes could be the product of ongoing subconscious confirmation bias."

"The gravitational theory of orbits could be the product of ongoing subconscious confirmation bias."

:):):):):)
 
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I have no disgreement or argument with “observers will see different things” and “two observers at different velocities will see each others clock running slower” because they will see effects of perception and observation anomalies. I don’t understand how this means each other’s clocks actually will run slower however.


Ask the cesium clocks?
:)
 
I'm starting to get the impression that ynot doesn't actually want to understand this.
This is not the first time validation of the twin "paradox" using caesium clocks has been bought up. Does he have a short term memory deficit perhaps?
 
I'm starting to get the impression that ynot doesn't actually want to understand this.
This is not the first time validation of the twin "paradox" using caesium clocks has been bought up. Does he have a short term memory deficit perhaps?

I believe he's got an identical twin who understood it fine.
 
I'm starting to get the impression that ynot doesn't actually want to understand this.

Sadly, this seems to be the case. The not understanding relativity part isn't a problem - it's not particularly intuitive and lots of people have trouble with it, especially those not so strong on the maths front. However, questions like this:
ynot said:
What problem does Relativity fix?
are rather different. This thread was started two years ago, almost to the day, yet in all that time ynot hasn't bothered to spend 10 seconds with Google or Wikipedia to find the answer to a simple question, the answer to which is part of most high school physics courses.

Ignorance isn't a major problem and can be cured. Deliberate ignorance is something else entirely. Especially when coupled with the astounding arrogance to declare the experts wrong.
 
A couple of questions . . .

Has it been experimentally proven (non-math) that light always travels at c regardless of the speed of the observer?

Yes.

What problem does Relativity fix?

It makes Maxwell's equations the same for all inertial reference frames (which was NOT the case under Galilean relativity). The invariance of c is a subset of this.
 

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