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Quote from: lightarrowQuote from: AndroidNeoxLight, itself, does not experience time.That statement doesn't mean anything.O course it does. That's a very common expression in special rleativity.E.g. - http://www.askamathematician.com/2011/07/q-does-light-experience-time/It's not as though light thinks but then again electrons
Quote from: AndroidNeoxLight, itself, does not experience time.That statement doesn't mean anything.
Light, itself, does not experience time.
You can create a frame of reference comoving with an electron, you CAN'T do it with a photon. Re-read you books of physics.
Quote from: AndroidNeox on 24/01/2013 01:31:04Quote from: lightarrow on 15/01/2013 19:30:59Quote from: AndroidNeox on 15/01/2013 01:55:39Light, itself, does not experience time.That statement doesn't mean anything.1. It's impossible to create a frame of reference comoving with light.2. If you travel at speeds very near to c, you will still experience time, no matter how close to c is your speed.And this could be one of the many examples of people that misunderstand relativity []Einstein had no problem using the perspective of light in his thought experiments. The statement is correct. Nothing that travels through space at c experiences time.Maybe you have read some popular book or seen a movie on TV, but I'm talking of physics, instead.Study physics, not popular books, then we can go on with the discussion...Regards.--lightarrow
Quote from: lightarrow on 15/01/2013 19:30:59Quote from: AndroidNeox on 15/01/2013 01:55:39Light, itself, does not experience time.That statement doesn't mean anything.1. It's impossible to create a frame of reference comoving with light.2. If you travel at speeds very near to c, you will still experience time, no matter how close to c is your speed.And this could be one of the many examples of people that misunderstand relativity []Einstein had no problem using the perspective of light in his thought experiments. The statement is correct. Nothing that travels through space at c experiences time.
Quote from: AndroidNeox on 15/01/2013 01:55:39Light, itself, does not experience time.That statement doesn't mean anything.1. It's impossible to create a frame of reference comoving with light.2. If you travel at speeds very near to c, you will still experience time, no matter how close to c is your speed.And this could be one of the many examples of people that misunderstand relativity []
Maybe you could look at in form of change. A photon doesn't change as far as I know, not intrinsically at least.
So to a photon created say at the big bang, or even 400,000 years later, no time has passed in its frame of reference, yet on earth, 13.7 billion years have passed?
Lightarrow ... When people say "that question does not make sense", I sometimes feel sympathetic, but as quantum theory does not make sense anyway, that's hardly a reasoned reply.Travelling close to the speed of light does slow "relative time" if I can call it that, so what's wrong with a thought experiment about travelling on a photon? Einstein did it.
The book I'd recommend you check is "Relativity" by Albert Einstein. In it he describes riding a tram away from a clock tower. He imagined the tram going faster and faster. He realized that, from his perspective, the clock would seem to slow down. And, at the speed of light, the clock would seem to have stopped.Are physics students not taught how to formulate thought experiments? It seems to be a lost art.
Can something oscillate without being a wave Pete, or at least have wave properties?Maybe it can?=That one is tricky, considering the duality.
Can something oscillate without being a wave Pete, or at least have wave properties?Maybe it can?
Quote from: yor_on on 29/01/2013 03:12:41Can something oscillate without being a wave Pete, or at least have wave properties?Maybe it can?Sure, a pendulum oscillates and is clearly not a wave. (A plot of it's position vs. time does look like a wave, however.)