The important thing about four vectors is that their magnitude is the same in all reference frames.
I think that for clarity's sake, you should write "four-vectors" and "four-velocities".
I lost you right there! If the rest frame has the same velocity as the particle, it cannot be inertial since the particle undergoes acceleration!?
It's like the tangent lines in the derivative. Each point has its own tangent line, so even though each line is straight, the curve is not.
I am quite good at expressing things in the most confusing possible manner. I'll give an example that may be clearer. The statement "moving clocks run slower" is confusing because it does imply that time slows down with speed (relative to any observer). The reality is that moving clocks measure events occuring in a slower inertial frame as having longer duration than what a clock at rest relative to said event would measure.
I think that's still not quite right. Rather, if you have events proceeding, in one reference frame, at the same place, but at different places, then in another reference frame, they will be assigned different spatial corrdinates, and temporal coordinates that increment at a lower rate than those in the other reference frame.
A big problem in understanding relativity is that people don't understand
how relative it is. When they're told that moving clocks run slower, they think that there is some absolute "time" through which the clock moves more slowly. Rather, the clock runs at normal speed in its own reference frame. That is, there is a quantity called "time" which increases at a normal rate. In another reference frame, the clock is measured with a
different quantity, and found to have less of that quantity. That this other quantity is given the same name as the other one is what causes the confusion.
If we look at a car going down a road, one person might describe it as going 40 miles north in an hour. That is, after an hour, its ditance from the South Pole increases 40 miles. Another person might observe that its distance from the Prime Meridian increases by 50 miles. If the first just says it traveled 40 miles, and the second says that it traveled 50 miles, it may seen that they are contradicting each other. But if we realize that the two instances of the word "mile" refer to different things (North-miles vs. East-miles), there is no contradiction.
One way of thinking about it (which, I suppose, might inspire its own misconceptions) is that each tick of the clock has a certain magnitude, so to speak, and that magnitude stays the same no matter what. A stationary clock has all of that magnitude going into time, so it runs at full speed. For a moving clock, each tick moves through space and time, so some of its magnitude is "used up" by the movement through space, and the amount that it travles through time is less. But the whole issue of whether the stuff it goes through is "space" or "time" is simply a labeling issue; one person calls the stuff its going through "time" and another person calls it "some time and some space".
If A and B are in two different inertial frames, B would see the clock of A running slower because it is moving relative to A and A would see the clock of B running slower because it is moving relative to B.
It's important to note that they don't just disagree about the results of the measurement of the clocks. They disagree as to
what to measure. That's why they're getting different answers. If they both measured the same thing, they would get the same answer. Remember how earlier, I talked about East being the distance to the Prime Meridian? The Prime Meridian is a set of points that is considered to all be “zero East”, and one’s distance East is then measured from the closest one of those points. For A, there is a collection of points which he considers to all be at “time zero”. He measures time as the distance to the closest of those points. When he looks at his own clock, that’s no problem, because the closest is always the same (his starting point). But when he looks at B’s clock, the closest point in the “time zero” set is constantly changing. (For those are getting lost: asking what the “closest point” in A’s “time zero” is the same thing as asking “According to A, where would B have been at the beginning, if he had remained at rest and ended up where he is now?” or “What, according to A, was, at time zero, the same
place as B?”) Now, both A and B agree on what the distance to this point is. The trouble is that, according to B, this point that A is measuring from is the
wrong point. B doesn’t disagree with the result of A’s measuring, he just says that A is measuring the wrong thing. According to B, he has remained still, so his “closest point” is always the same: where B started from.
So, really, they don’t disagree about the speed of their clocks. They both agree that B’s clock is proceeding through “A time” more slowly than A’s clock. It’s just B says that “A time” isn’t “real” time, it’s a confabulation of time and space.
Einstein says rubbish. Time and space are inseperable, we live in a 4 dimensional world.
[Annoying pedant]According to Einstein, time and space are inseparable[/Annoying pedant]
Kinda like if you take slices of a cylinder. The flat slice will show a circle. Other slices will show an ellipse. You are saying that it can't be a circle and an ellipse at the same time. It isn't. Its a cylinder. You just can't visualize the cylinder.
Actually, the issue of visualization isn’t really the issue. We can visualize two dimensional space just fine, but the same issues come up. The real issue is that we want to deal with real numbers. In other words, we want to decompose space into one-dimensional coordinates. And once we do that, we’re going to get different answers depending on what coordinate system we use.