Help, please, I really can't quite get past the twin paradox thing in special relativity. I think I understand it, with time dialation and all, but here's what's puzzling:
Twin one leaves the earth in his 1-g accelerating rocket and lets it burn for three months. After only a few weeks he's travelling at relativistic speed relative to the earth and can quite clearly see through is telescope that the earth's clocks are wrong, they appear to run too slowly. He can confirm this by watching how fast the earth revolves around the sun, and since he used his own clock/calendar to decide when to shut off his engine he sees that the earth has not yet gone a quarter turn around the sun, but he knows that three months have elapsed according to his clock.
He turns his rocket around, facing the earth, and restarts his 1-g engine. After three months of this he is now stationary with respect to the earth again, having cancelled his outbound speed (let's assume he has a adjusted the thrust to maintain his 1-g acceleration even as he uses mass in the rocket). He notices that the clocks on earth now match his in terms of running rate, but again he can see that the earth has not gone another full quarter turn around the sun since he last checked. In fact, it has gone well less than a half turn since his journey began.
He again starts his rocket and runs it for three months, this time heading back home. After three more months he shuts it down and, yes, less than another quarter turn of the annual cycle has gone by since his last check. In fact, the earth is just a bit past half way around the sun since he origninally started. He again turns the ship around, facing away from earth, and restarts the engines. He reaches earth just as his speed relative to it drops to zero. He lands and climbs out.
Now, at this point, the "classic" twin paradox would have him meet his much older brother, as the traveller was supposed to have been exposed to the time slowing effects of his greater speed relative to earth. But if I got the above right, the astronaut should meet his YOUNGER twin on earth, as the earth (as seen from the astronaut's reference frame) was what travelled away and back.
I picked a 1-g constant accleration for the astronaut to remove general relativity effects.
So where did I mess up? Would an older twin (relative to earth) emerge from the rocket, or a younger one, or would they still be the same age relative to each other?
Twin one leaves the earth in his 1-g accelerating rocket and lets it burn for three months. After only a few weeks he's travelling at relativistic speed relative to the earth and can quite clearly see through is telescope that the earth's clocks are wrong, they appear to run too slowly. He can confirm this by watching how fast the earth revolves around the sun, and since he used his own clock/calendar to decide when to shut off his engine he sees that the earth has not yet gone a quarter turn around the sun, but he knows that three months have elapsed according to his clock.
He turns his rocket around, facing the earth, and restarts his 1-g engine. After three months of this he is now stationary with respect to the earth again, having cancelled his outbound speed (let's assume he has a adjusted the thrust to maintain his 1-g acceleration even as he uses mass in the rocket). He notices that the clocks on earth now match his in terms of running rate, but again he can see that the earth has not gone another full quarter turn around the sun since he last checked. In fact, it has gone well less than a half turn since his journey began.
He again starts his rocket and runs it for three months, this time heading back home. After three more months he shuts it down and, yes, less than another quarter turn of the annual cycle has gone by since his last check. In fact, the earth is just a bit past half way around the sun since he origninally started. He again turns the ship around, facing away from earth, and restarts the engines. He reaches earth just as his speed relative to it drops to zero. He lands and climbs out.
Now, at this point, the "classic" twin paradox would have him meet his much older brother, as the traveller was supposed to have been exposed to the time slowing effects of his greater speed relative to earth. But if I got the above right, the astronaut should meet his YOUNGER twin on earth, as the earth (as seen from the astronaut's reference frame) was what travelled away and back.
I picked a 1-g constant accleration for the astronaut to remove general relativity effects.
So where did I mess up? Would an older twin (relative to earth) emerge from the rocket, or a younger one, or would they still be the same age relative to each other?