Mashuna
Ovis ex Machina
but only if you use a t=0 to derive your other 't's is what I see...
"eg."right now at t=0 the london evnt is t=1678 millenia"
Why pick t=0? It's just another reference point. Derive all your other t's from t=42 if you like.
but only if you use a t=0 to derive your other 't's is what I see...
"eg."right now at t=0 the london evnt is t=1678 millenia"
When any event happens t is the time the event happens.ok so give an example of t= "anytime you choose" and tell me when that event actually happens what is 't'
you have to be at t=0 to derive t=1687 or t=42Why pick t=0? It's just another reference point. Derive all your other t's from t=42 if you like.
Subtraction: Start at t1 = 42, end at t2 = 84. Then t = t2-t1 = 42. At no time is t (the time interval zero). At no time is t1 zero. At no time is t2 zero.you have to be at t=0 to derive t=1687 or t=42
other wise what the hell does the 1687 or the 42 mean?
Subtraction: Start at t1 = 42, end at t2 = 84. Then t = t2-t1 = 42. At no time is t (the time interval zero). At no time is t1 zero. At no time is t2 zero.
and 42 units from what?
or
84 units from what?
just to clarify the point so we are mnot talking at cross purposes [ i am not talking about duration for example.well, depending which way you go, either 42 is 42 units from 84 or 0, and 84 is 84 units from 168 or zero. But there's no special significance in that. You may as well say that 42 is 20 units from 22 or 62.
and 42 units from what?
or
84 units from what?
You may also want to know that all of the spacetime coordinates (x, y, z and t) are anything you want them to be and they are arbitary.Actually don't bother with it... the thead has been answered. It has been stated that according to SRT 't' can be anything you want it to be and that it is arbitary.
thats all I need to know...
just to clarify the point so we are mnot talking at cross purposes [ i am not talking about duration for example.
when you start a stop watch in real life say at a sporting event what does t=? at the time you start it?
Generally 0, for convenience. There's no reason why it has to though, is there? I mean, you say you're not talking about duration, but the example you give (timing a sporting event), is specifically to measure duration.
no just the starting point of a timed duration.... the pohysical moment that the stop watch is started...as in "click" event of action
I am not disagreeing with your assessment when I say this, but I disagree that the t=0 is unimportant.The problem is that "t=0" is ambiguous, the way you're using it. If you look at the examples of Einstein, he typically says "let x=x0 and t=t0 be the event that ..." and then describe what event he's talking about. If you then switch to talking about another event, you can use x=x1, t=t1 and so forth. The key thing here is that it becomes possible to look at the differences x1-x0 and t1-t0 in a meaningful way.
The absolute values of all these things x0, x1, t0, t1 and so forth lack meaning, but their differences are highly interesting, and that's what SR is interested in describing.
Actually the op needs to be rephrased a little to read:
"If we have two or more observers [ RF's ] at relative v is t=0 for light events simultaneous for both or all of them?"
- the correction in bold.
If your reset button is broken, the watch could read any value. It's still just as useful - just subtract the starting time and you get the duration you want. I don't have a timer on my (old) watch, so I just wait until the minute figure switches and start running then. It works, and it's physically equivalent.