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I understand that if one thing is moving at close to light speed relative to something else that is moving little, the one moving at close to the speed of light experiences a time slow-down
if it were to look at a clock held by the item moving little that clock would be ticking very, very fast from its point of view
Question - let's say in the entire universe there are only those two items described above - how on Earth (lol) would "the universe" determine which is moving fastly relative to the other?
From any point of view, they would be approaching each other, or moving away from each other, very quickly, but it would seem impossible to tell which is moving relative to the other.
How does the "universe" "know" which one really has the relatively fast motion and thus which clock should be running fast and which slow?
Related question - I've always heard that relativity theory says basically that space is not an absolute - there is no "ether" for example.
But I distinctly remember listening to an audiobook some time ago that seemed to say that the motion of objects in the universe was actually RELATIVE to spacetime.
So in an example where I tell you all that is in the universe is 2 particles, and they are approaching each other a close to light speed, if either was to look at one another's clock (putting aside my assumption that there were only 2 particles in the universe haha), the other's clock would both look to be running slow in each case.
What if I kept the same example, only X and Y particles in the universe, but I changed the facts just a bit to tell you that it is 100% certain that a force acted upon particle X (not particle Y) to speed X up to close to the speed of light, and thus is was X, not Y that accelerated.
and I were to tell you that X particle appears to be moving close to light speed both to Y particle and the rest of the universe (and vice versa)
I was under the impression that what we think of as empty space has various fields in it, along with virtual pairs of particles popping in and out of existence all the time.
What if I kept the same example, only X and Y particles in the universe, but I changed the facts just a bit to tell you that it is 100% certain that a force acted upon particle X (not particle Y) to speed X up to close to the speed of light, and thus is was X, not Y that accelerated. Would that change you answer at all? I highly suspect you will say no!