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Quote from: Bored chemist on 25/07/2017 22:16:23OK, these are those nice clocks you find in thought experiments.You can synchronise them however you like, including the button on the top.If they are next to each other then here's an amusing way to do it.Turn one of the clocks upside down.Press its button down on the button of the other clock.Since both presses are the same event they are necessarily synchronised exactly.Try doing that with three clocks, but you've also got the problem that the buttons probably won't "fire" simultaneously, so you're really going to have to smash the clocks together hard to minimise the error.QuoteIt's a thought experiment we don't worry about irrelevant issues like whether my reflexes are good enough to press two buttons in a tenth of a second or what.Then stop obsessing about it - the reason I spelt out a reasonable method was to attempt to ward off any ridiculous diversions of the kind that have subsequently been taken.QuoteBecause the two clocks are next to each other it's perfectly simple to synchronise them. Relativity doesn't have any problems with "at the same time" for things that are "in the same place".You're repeating what I've already said.QuoteNow, do you see that my "awful" synchronisation method is (at the time when I'm synchronising them) actually mathematically perfect?You can see how no observer anywhere in the universe, regardless of their speed, acceleration of local gravity will ever see the two clocks -just after I push both buttons in the same place and at the same time- as being anything other than synchronised?That's not the part of the synchronisation process that I'm calling awful. The awful part is when you move one of them somewhere else and it's movement slows it and leads to its timing lagging by a different amount depending on how quickly you relocated it.QuoteThat's why I choose to set the clocks running at zero in the same place and at the same time.From the point of view of nearly everybody else in the universe, your "synchronised clocks" are ( or at least may be) never in step because they are separate in space.With my approach, once we have two clocks that at least start out together we can run the experiment where we know how far out of synch the clocks are (because we can calculate it from the way in which we moved one of them).And we can minimise that change.There are better methods where you don't have to worry about extra errors creeping in from the way you accelerate and decelerate your moving clock, plus complications from little wanders off a straight path vertically and horizontally. You can simply send a flash of light.QuoteWe can make it as small as we like (by moving them a short distance and/ or slowly).Which you don't need to do as you still have to make a correction, so you might as well make a big correction and move the clock quickly.QuoteAnd then we have two nearly synchronised clocks which we can set off a flash lamp in front of and look at the delay.And at the end of it all, when you time the delay, you get the answer c because you have synchronised clocks with the same time difference between them as with any other valid method so that they will assert the speed is c even if it's actually close to 0 or 2c.
OK, these are those nice clocks you find in thought experiments.You can synchronise them however you like, including the button on the top.If they are next to each other then here's an amusing way to do it.Turn one of the clocks upside down.Press its button down on the button of the other clock.Since both presses are the same event they are necessarily synchronised exactly.
It's a thought experiment we don't worry about irrelevant issues like whether my reflexes are good enough to press two buttons in a tenth of a second or what.
Because the two clocks are next to each other it's perfectly simple to synchronise them. Relativity doesn't have any problems with "at the same time" for things that are "in the same place".
Now, do you see that my "awful" synchronisation method is (at the time when I'm synchronising them) actually mathematically perfect?You can see how no observer anywhere in the universe, regardless of their speed, acceleration of local gravity will ever see the two clocks -just after I push both buttons in the same place and at the same time- as being anything other than synchronised?
That's why I choose to set the clocks running at zero in the same place and at the same time.From the point of view of nearly everybody else in the universe, your "synchronised clocks" are ( or at least may be) never in step because they are separate in space.With my approach, once we have two clocks that at least start out together we can run the experiment where we know how far out of synch the clocks are (because we can calculate it from the way in which we moved one of them).And we can minimise that change.
We can make it as small as we like (by moving them a short distance and/ or slowly).
And then we have two nearly synchronised clocks which we can set off a flash lamp in front of and look at the delay.
And the bit that you steadfastly ignore is that you can easily make that error as small as you like.
No... this is where you go wrong.
OK, so which of these is true?Quote from: GoC on 24/07/2017 12:27:22But speed between clock positions does not affect the difference in reading on the moved clock.Quote from: David Cooper on 23/07/2017 23:55:45the only issue is how much, with faster speeds of movement pushing them out of sync by more.
But speed between clock positions does not affect the difference in reading on the moved clock.
the only issue is how much, with faster speeds of movement pushing them out of sync by more.
"Try doing that with three clocks, "As far as I can tell, the only thing you do with the 3rd clock (the one in the middle) is use it to tell you when to sync the other two.It serves no purpose.
"Then stop obsessing about it "I'm not. You are the one who is going on about the mechanics of pushing two buttons.
I keep on pointing out that you can't meaningfully sync two clocks unless they are together- because otherwise, just about everybody else in the universe will never see the two clocks reading the same time.
And you keep saying that you can synchronise them when they are far apart- which is "true" from one unusual point of view- you have to be half way between them.
And then you say this method - which everybody in the universe except you agrees doesn't actually make the clocks tell the same time- is better than mine where everybody does agree that they (initially) say the same time.That's an odd use of "better".
On the subject of repeating what someone said, I cited the "2 clocks on a jet plane" fairly early in this thread. And then you post "Imagine a light clock aligned with the direction you're moving it in. If you move this clock at c, the clock will stop clicking throughout the time you're moving it because the light would have to travel faster than c in order to complete a circuit (and thereby to tick). All clocks are limited in the same way, slowed to the same extent by their movement through space." Well, yes, I know that moving clocks makes them run slow. That's why I cited the most famous demonstration of the fact.
Why did you bother to raise it?
"That's not the part of the synchronisation process that I'm calling awful. The awful part is when you move one of them somewhere else and it's movement slows it and leads to its timing lagging by a different amount depending on how quickly you relocated it."Well, two points there.The synchronisation process happens with the clocks stationary (and next to each-other) which is the only way you can do it in order that everyone agrees that they are in sync.So the " part of the synchronisation process that I'm calling awful" isn't part of the synchronisation process .
And the bit that you steadfastly ignore is that you can easily make that error as small as you like.Why is it that you can say "lagging by a different amount depending on how quickly you relocated it." without realising that, precisely by changing how quickly you relocate it, you can change the lag?
Why not change it to make it as near to zero as you like?Why not change it, measure the apparent 1 way speed of light, and then extrapolate to the lag that you would get if you moved the clock at zero speed?
Also re "You can simply send a flash of light." OK, you send a flash of light from the "middle" to start two clocks, then you send a second flash to stop them..Either you send the second flash from the same place as you send the first- in which case you don't learn anything...
You have called this "better".Do you see why I don't agree?
There is one major point on which I may have been wrong, and that's the idea that slower movement leads to less error if you're moving one clock away from another
Can you do that for a few more speeds and then plot a graph of "error in clock" vs speed of travel.Then, we can extrapolate and see what the error is in the limit of zero speed.
If, as I suspect, it turns out to be zero then; for the very odd case of a very simple, slow, system, we can show that the error in the clock synchronisation is smaller than we need to worry about.
Quote from: David Cooper on 26/07/2017 21:12:45There is one major point on which I may have been wrong, and that's the idea that slower movement leads to less error if you're moving one clock away from anotherYes, ...
No - I demonstrated that I had not been wrong on that point. Read carefully what I said in the post before this one in my latest reply to BC and then you'll hopefully be able to see that we're talking about two different kinds synchronisation error, the bigger of which comes into play when you only move one of the clocks and which is greater the faster you move that clock into place. So far, you appear to have missed the existence of this larger error.
He is talking about this residual error and has yet to grasp that we have been talking primarily about a greater error which can be cancelled out and which is bigger the faster you move the clocks.
So far, you appear to have missed the existence of this larger error.
Absolutely not. Slow clock transport and light synchronization are identical mathematically as I've said many times. I've actually shown the math on this more than once in this thread but nobody actually bothers with understanding the math I wrote...
The "amount of error" is dependent on your initial synchronization convention. That original convention assumes a value for ε. I already gave links to all of this and quite a bit of math. All I get back is tons of text with no addressing the math.
No. You are not writing about a greater error. You can't even "know the error" the way you describe without assuming a convention. The assumed synchronization convention is not a residual error. It's NOT an error at all but rather a choice of convention done because either nothing more exists to find for this or we can't find it because it doesn't matter in any experiment we've ever done. In either case the one-way speed of light is based on convention used.
What exactly are we trying to measure here? The thing you keep calling a "residual error." Extra errors (which can be corrected for anyway when a convention is chosen) caused by crazy ways to transport clocks be damned. I do NOT care about them because the deeper problem is the assumed synchronization we already have. Everything after this is just piling gravy on the already fat chicken.
Absolutely not. Slow clock transport and light synchronization are identical mathematically
That's all very nice.But can we go back to the system I described?
That way we can ignore (for the minute- we can get back to it later) David's point about "But, what happens if the system is actually moving? ".We can ignore it because I'm sat here on the ground, looking at the clocks and, from my POV they are not moving.I am not, for the minute, concerned about how it looks to someone flying past in a plane or whatever.
I'm interested in measuring it here, locally, where gravity is small and even so it has no significant effect (and, at a pinch I could correct for it, but it's easier to just make that correction very small). Round here the change in gravity- if I sent the light straight up- would be about 1 in 10^15 over a distance of 22.5 metres and that's far enough to get a reasonable measurement with modern kit)(Based on this)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound%E2%80%93Rebka_experimentIf I send the light out horizontally, the effect is much smaller- so I'm going to ignore it.
Where's the problem? I have numbered the steps so you can point out where the issue lies.
(2) Because we move one of them slowly, the phase error on it is arbitrarily small.So it will stay arbitrarily close to synchronised.
Quote from: dutch on Today at 02:44:44Absolutely not. Slow clock transport and light synchronization are identical mathematicallyAssuming a Master clock, and 2 Slave clocks, wouldn't the loss of time for the s-clock in slow transport be equal to d/a[1-sqrt(1-a*a)]? d=distance, a=speed
but it's only going to be close to zero if the system's at rest.
Unless experiments prove otherwise there is no error as David keeps implying because we are free to choose any convention we wish.
He's pushing his idea based on a preferred frame that could be true but cannot be verified/pinned down.
There is nothing magical about it.
David is not understanding why the clock difference depends on distance. It has nothing to do with "errors" or time dilation but rather the plane of simultaneity chosen.
Now, here's the problem. If the clocks are moving so slowly that there is no error of the second type creeping in (due to different time dilations applying to different clocks while they're being moved apart), they must stay in sync in BOTH frames. They cannot possibly be ticking simultaneously in both frames though, so how can they get out of sync in the absolute frame where we watch the system moving past us?