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Quote from: Dimensional on 27/06/2022 21:01:07Here may be a clearer way to see my issue. Imagine a very simple universe where there only exists object A and an object B. They are on a collision course. Scientist A, (from another dimension) uses object A as a point of reference. But scientist B (from yet a different dimension than scientist A) uses object B as a reference. Each scientist is going to end up with a different description of this universe from using special relativity.So what's your issue?
Here may be a clearer way to see my issue. Imagine a very simple universe where there only exists object A and an object B. They are on a collision course. Scientist A, (from another dimension) uses object A as a point of reference. But scientist B (from yet a different dimension than scientist A) uses object B as a reference. Each scientist is going to end up with a different description of this universe from using special relativity.
That each scientist is going to end up with a different description of this universe from using special relativity.
Hi.Quote from: Dimensional on 27/06/2022 22:33:12That each scientist is going to end up with a different description of this universe from using special relativity. Yes, exactly this sort of thing does happen. There are some questions you can ask which are going to be frame dependant - they have answers but the answers will depend on the frame of reference you have chosen. For example, the question "is object A moving?" is something that the two scientists will not agree on. Hopefully they will know the answer is frame dependant so they will answer more cautiously: "Well, no, not in this frame of reference anyway". Fortunately, there are some questions that can be asked and answered more objectively: "Will the two objects collide" is something that both scientists will agree on. Best Wishes.
But when looking at my scenario, SR seems to give two different answers. Since either object can be considered the object at rest, then each scientist is going to get a different answer.
Quote from: Origin on 27/06/2022 22:10:12Quote from: Dimensional on 27/06/2022 21:01:07Here may be a clearer way to see my issue. Imagine a very simple universe where there only exists object A and an object B. They are on a collision course. Scientist A, (from another dimension) uses object A as a point of reference. But scientist B (from yet a different dimension than scientist A) uses object B as a reference. Each scientist is going to end up with a different description of this universe from using special relativity.So what's your issue?That each scientist is going to end up with a different description of this universe from using special relativity.
Quote from: Dimensional on 28/06/2022 01:44:51But when looking at my scenario, SR seems to give two different answers. Since either object can be considered the object at rest, then each scientist is going to get a different answer.I don't really know how many different ways it can be explained to you that there ARE 2 different answers and both of the answers are correct for the frames they are measured in. I understand that this goes against our intuition, but sometimes our intuition is not correct. Our intuition tells us that if we are moving towards a light then the speed of that light should be c + our speed, but that is wrong. We can measure the speed and it is a fact that our intuition is wrong.
Quote from: Dimensional on 27/06/2022 22:33:12Quote from: Origin on 27/06/2022 22:10:12Quote from: Dimensional on 27/06/2022 21:01:07Here may be a clearer way to see my issue. Imagine a very simple universe where there only exists object A and an object B. They are on a collision course. Scientist A, (from another dimension) uses object A as a point of reference. But scientist B (from yet a different dimension than scientist A) uses object B as a reference. Each scientist is going to end up with a different description of this universe from using special relativity.So what's your issue?That each scientist is going to end up with a different description of this universe from using special relativity.This really doesn’t need scientists from a different universe and it isn’t down to special relativity.It was Galileo who first pointed out that if you were in a cabin on a ship you would not be able to tell if the ship was moving, or in which direction unless you had information from outside the room. He concluded that it was reasonable to consider two moving ships as one stationary and the other moving or vise versa and the laws of physics remain the same. For example, if a ship is moving and firing a cannon at a stationary ship, the trajectory of the cannon ball relative to the first ship is exactly the same if the first ship is stationary and the second moving. When we consider this scenario in space where there are no fixed references, it becomes more obvious. It is called Galilean Relativity. Einstein added the effects of the constancy of the speed of light and extended Galileo’s principle to Special Relativity.
If both answers are correct, then doesn't that mean that 2 different universes can exist depending on which object you choose to be at rest?
More specifically, if A is chosen to follow the direction of the time dimension, or, "be only in time" (I can't remember the proper wording; it's been a long time since I took linear algebra)
I would like to know how the components of time vs space work in SR. It seems, from where I am at in my knowledge, that the temporal component and the spatial component can swap, aka fabric of spacetime.
Hi.Quote from: Dimensional on 04/07/2022 00:41:30If both answers are correct, then doesn't that mean that 2 different universes can exist depending on which object you choose to be at rest? Does there need to be two universes just because there's two different ways of describing it?You can go outside and measure your bicycle and find it's 1 metre long.I can go outside and measure your bicycle and find it's 39 inches long.Presumably, you wouldn't have thought that there must be two different universes, one where the bicycle is 1 metre and the other where it is 39 inches. You'd probably be quite happy to accept that I was using inches and you were using metres, we were just using different measurements to describe the same physical thing. However, if what you meant was that (for at least some things) there's no objective reality, then I'd agree with you. None-the-less, at the moment (as described by Colin2B) you haven't really described a situation that required much more than simple Gallilean relativity and it might be best to just push complications from special relativity to one side for a moment. It's not important here.
I think this could be a problem or misunderstanding. You could choose to make object A stationary and that would make the spatial component of its 4-velocity 0. However 0 is something, it is a numerical value. The object still has an ordinary spatial velocity, it's just that the magnitude of that velocity is 0. I probably need to rephrase this - the object is always found somewhere in space it doesn't vanish and exist "only in time" or anything weird like that. The object is found at the same place in space at all times, it has 0 velocity which just means it's location doesn't change with time. The spatial 3-velocity is (0, 0, 0) it is not ( n/a, n/a, n/a )Best Wishes.
I think this is outside of the scope of Galilean relativity because nothing is actually moving in GR. GR implies a block universe.
So the idea of an object to be moving relative to another object doesn't really make any sense in a block universe.
I think this is outside of the scope of Galilean relativity because nothing is actually moving in GR. GR implies a block universe. So the idea of an object to be moving relative to another object doesn't really make any sense in a block universe.
Hi again,Quote from: Dimensional on 04/07/2022 04:30:41I think this is outside of the scope of Galilean relativity because nothing is actually moving in GR. GR implies a block universe. I'm easily confused. GR is usually an abbreviation of "General Relativity" but I'm going to assume you are using it as an abbreviation of Galilean Relativity. I'm not really sure that Galilean Relativity does fully demand the idea of a block universe. I think we usually forumlate the notion of a block universe after we accept Special Relativity. However, the fine details about what a "block universe" means may not be all that important. Just simple Newtonian mechanics already suggests something we would call a "deterministic universe". This just means that, if Newtonian mechanics is correct, then you should be able to calculate where everything will be and how it is moving at any time in the future from knowledge about where it is and how it is moving now. Similarly, you should also be able to calculate where it was and how it was moving at any point in the past from knowledge about the present. Overall then, if you had knowledge about the present than it's just a matter of doing some calculations - there's nothing uncertain about the future or past, you would have full knowledge of that. A deterministic universe doesn't necessarily mean that the future has already happened, just that that there's nothing especially uncertain or undetermined about it. Special Relativity (SR) probably pushes the notion of a deterministic universe a bit further. One of the things a good text or lecture course about SR might discuss is the example of what is called the "Andromeda paradox" or Rietdijk–Putnam–Penrose argument ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rietdijk%E2%80%93Putnam_argument ). These sorts of topics are one of the ways in which you could build up to a more complete notion of a block universe. Specifically, where you could start to argue that all instants of time and space seem to need to exist. It's worth mentioning that although these things often have names like "paradox" it's just because Physicist's and Philosopher's have good publicity and media agents and they select the titles. They aren't usually impossible or logical paradoxes, it's just that it sounds more interesting to call it a "paradox" instead of "an intersting thing". Additionally, it's not entirely fair to say that the idea of a "Block Universe" is an idea in Physics. It's an idea in Philosophy that is based on some ideas in Physics, although they often call it "Eternalism". Physics doesn't really care if you favour a Block universe or Presentism, it just offers some models and allows some predictions to be made. It's not offering any fundamental truth about how the universe really is, only a few models that seem to be useful. More to the point, you can easily reconcile Special Relativity with Presentism if you try. One option is to accept that when an object experiences an acceleration than the universe around them is changed. (Please don't get too worried about ideas like a deterministic universe - there's loads of things in physics that can offset or alleviate any concerns, like Chaos theory and quantum uncertainty but that falls outside the scope of this thread).
Quote from: Dimensional on 04/07/2022 04:30:41So the idea of an object to be moving relative to another object doesn't really make any sense in a block universe. Are you sure? Movement is described just as a rate of change of one thing (position) with respect to something else (time). So this is just a ratio of a small change in one variable to the corresponding small change in another variable. Just because we, human beings, tend to experience and think of time a certain way, doesn't necessarily grant it any special nature. It's just something, some variable, we can use to calculate rates of change with respect to. We could have some other variable like S - let's give it a silly name like "entropy of the universe" - and just calculate rates of change of position with respect to S.