0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Quote from: David Cooper on 04/08/2017 01:56:08If you're doing this on one planet and your cousin is doing the same thing on another planet moving relative to yours, both of you are making the same claim to be stationary, and at least one of you is being fooled.No, I'm stationary from my PoV and he's stationary from his.But, since these viewpoints are different there's no contradiction.Nobody is being "fooled"
If you're doing this on one planet and your cousin is doing the same thing on another planet moving relative to yours, both of you are making the same claim to be stationary, and at least one of you is being fooled.
As I have pointed out before, I know that other people who are moving WRT me will see things differently- so it's no surprise that they will interpret the experiment I'm doing differently and will think the one-way speed of light I measure is different.I know that.But, as I pointed out before, they won't even agree with me about the speed of the bus into town, so I don't expect them to agree with me about the one way speed of light.I'm only interested in measuring it in my frame of reference.
It's not that anyone is wrong. it's a different point of view.My cousin lives in France, I live in England.If someone asks us "what's the name of the Capital city" we will give different answers- but nobody is being "fooled" are they?
They're answering different questions,
Quote from: David Cooper on 05/08/2017 23:00:43They're answering different questions,Fine.The two questions being asked are what's the one way speed of light as BC determines it and what's the one way tipped of light as BC's cousin determines it.Why would you expect the answers to always agree?
If a clock runs slow because it's moved, it fails to record all the time that has passed for it, and that results in an error in its timing. The faster you move it, the bigger that error is.
it fails to record all the time that has passed for it
E.g. IF the system is stationary, THEN a clock moving through the system runs slow. While we are discussing things under that condition ("IF the system is stationary"), everything said is governed by that condition. When we switch to a different condition such as "IF the system is moving at 8.866c", everything we then say is governed by that new condition. The fact that we can't tell which of the cases is true does not negate the truth (conditional truth) of what is said about that case on the basis that it's true if the condition is true and may not be true if the condition is false.
It's the choice of frame that selects a proposed one-way speed of light relative to the system.
You choose a frame of reference and thereby conditionally assert that the speed of light is the same relative to that frame in all directions. That makes the speed of light not equal to c relative to objects moving through that frame in most directions and provides a different theory as to the reality of the situation to any of the theories based on using different frames (all of those theories being in contradiction of each other as only one of them can be true).
If you restrict yourself to ε=1/2, you are selecting the frame of reference in which the system is at rest, and that sheds no light on anything. It's only when you work things through using at least two different reference frames that you can gain a real understanding of what's going on.
Quote from: David Cooper on 04/08/2017 21:52:33If a clock runs slow because it's moved, it fails to record all the time that has passed for it, and that results in an error in its timing. The faster you move it, the bigger that error is.The difference is in the rate the clocks tick. It's still not an error because the amount of time that passed for the clock is exactly the number the clock reads. All clocks work the same down to the subatomic scales (in every experiment ever done). I know exactly what you're trying to say but calling it an "error" is just wrong.
Quoteit fails to record all the time that has passed for itThe above is especially wrong. The time that's passed for it is exactly equal to what its clock reads (proper time). The clock is measuring the number of ticks that take place and there is no error for a moving clock. Clocks moving relative to an absolute rest frame would simply tick slower. This slower tick rate is no more invalid than the faster tick rate of "stationary" clocks.
tend not to believe the "block universe" model but it's still mathematically valid. Your logic is only true from the 3D LET perspective and is not true from a completely 4D "block" perspective.
The reason why LET and SR still both remain valid is because we can't set ε absolutely to distinguish the two.
The two certainly use a CONVENTION or an agreed upon set of rules to explain what ε is. This convention goes beyond simply setting a single reference frame. However, for the last 110 years countless geniuses arguing fiercely have not set ε in a theory beyond using a convention.
You keep pushing that LET or some version of it must be true and SR's 4D concept is wrong. I personally tend to not like the fully 4D conceptualization of SR but I don't need to choose between LET and SR here. All I need to do is show that ε is chosen arbitrarily. I've done this multiple times.
OK. And theories like SR and LET simply set up ε and therefore "choice of frame" via convention. The entire way they view ε is through convention.
Yes, one (or at least one convention) is most definitely right and all others are probably wrong.
However, we have no way to prove what ε is so we simply create theories that form an agreed upon way to choose ε. These agreements are called conventions. The agreements are not called reference frames.
In a completely 4D universe you can still have ε =1/2 for all frames and have them all right locally. In a 3D LET framework it can't work. I know you don't like the fully 4D concept and I don't like it either but I'm not going to argue against its math. However, Einstein still set ε to a certain value arbitrarily in his theories.
Einstein locally chose ε=1/2 and reference frames moving at velocity v relative to any point are seen as "rotated" in a 4D structure in the fully 4D conceptualization. ε appears to be something other than 1/2 when using the Lorentz Transformation (which comes from LET) but it does not in the fully 4D structure. This is similar to how a car would look shorter when its going up a steep hill when viewed from above. However, the car is not truly shorter. Again you can choose to believe either SR or LET as both match every experiment ever done (either can extend to a general theory). SR is easier to work with because its just simpler to assume ε=1/2 as a convention.
You keep saying I'm obfuscating things. However, I'm simply not trying to get a simple question bogged down by a pro LET or pro SR sideshow.The simple answer:We can ONLY measure the one-way speed of light via an arbitrarily set convention because we arbitrarily set ε.
It's what you've just said that's wrong because you're assuming that the amount of time that's passed for the clock is equal to the amount of time it's recorded. When a light clock is stationary, it ticks at maximum speed because the round trip distance is shortest. When you move it, the round trip distance increases, so the clock records fewer cycles in a given length of time. If you move a clock backwards and forwards at the right frequency and with the right timing, you can shorten the round trip for the light and make the clock tick faster than normal, but again it is not recording the amount of time that has passed for it as it is exaggerating the amount of time that has gone by. Move it backwards and forwards a different way and you can make it record less time passing than has actually passed. Any movement of a clock leads to an error in the amount of time it records. Why would anyone be fooled by one kind of failure for a clock to record the right amount of time that's passed for it while not being fooled by another? In all cases, the light is moving at the same speed through space without being slowed by any kind of slowing of time.
Here's another case that shows up the truth. Imagine a powerful distant source of gamma rays that damages DNA. Perpendicular to the direction these rays are coming, we run the twins "paradox" experiment, having one twin travel at very high speed and the other travel slowly. Both are exposed to the same amount of radiation, and the moving twin has interacted with it with greater intensity throughout. That twin can be "younger" but genetically more damaged. This business of him supposedly being younger is really no different from putting some food in the freezer while identical food rots outside the freezer and then claiming on defrosting the food from the freezer that it's younger. It isn't - it's merely had its functionality slowed and has decayed less.
This business of him supposedly being younger is really no different from putting some food in the freezer while identical food rots outside the freezer and then claiming on defrosting the food from the freezer that it's younger. It isn't - it's merely had its functionality slowed and has decayed less.
All that has slowed is the rate of cycle completions.
They do not both remain valid - all SR models have either been shown not to function in a viable manner, or in the case of the static block model have been shown to lack real causation because no effects have can have been caused by their apparent causes.
QuoteYes, one (or at least one convention) is most definitely right and all others are probably wrong.That claim is not compatible with SR where there is asserted to be no absolute frame. If it was accepted by the SR camp, we wouldn't be arguing about anything.
It's only in the static block that you have the illusion of it working because nothing is moving at all
Which is no different from saying that you're selecting a frame of reference and then using the assumption that light moves relative to it at c as a basis for measuring the speed of light as c.
regardless of setup, you will only measure light speed as c.
The time a clock measures is due to its internal ticking. ... They measure the local time (proper time).
The same thought experiment you have above must also work if most of the stuff in the universe was moving relative to the absolute rest frame while the twin was not. In this case everything in the universe except the twin would be younger but the twin would still be fried because f' would still be the same.
Except if you were to go to bed and I would freeze you solid or even significantly lower you body temperature that would be very noticeable to everyone. If you were on a spacecraft and it accelerated slowly while you slept you would be able to act normally when you woke up.
Even in an absolute rest frame time is still measured by the ticking of clocks.... I don't know how you're defining time.
QuoteThey do not both remain valid - all SR models have either been shown not to function in a viable manner, or in the case of the static block model have been shown to lack real causation because no effects have can have been caused by their apparent causes.I know others would disagree. I know you don't like SR got it.
That's why you don't understand what a convention is. SR uses a convention to arbitrarily set ε =1/2 locally for all reference frames. This is ONE convention and SR sets ε by this one convention (we must believe in a truly 4D spacetime to do this). LET also sets ε by one convention but we must arbitrarily set the absolute rest frame (or absolute foliation in a general LET to do this).
QuoteIt's only in the static block that you have the illusion of it working because nothing is moving at allOK. So it works for the static block......... You're dragging this into a pro LET / pro SR debate again.
But you don't understand what a convention is.
" The speed of light is C"?
Certainly, the expression here for the error in timekeepinghttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_dilation#Simple_inference_of_velocity_time_dilation tends to zero for slow transport of the clock.
I'm quite happy to accept that I'm wrong, but nobody seems to have come up with a viable reason yet.OK from the PoV of a passing astronaut, I get the wrong answer- but his view of everything would be different.Certainly, the expression here for the error in timekeepinghttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_dilation#Simple_inference_of_velocity_time_dilationtends to zero for slow transport of the clock.So I should be able to have two clocks, separated in space, but still essentially synchronised.I can record when a flash of light reaches them.And if one is "near" and the other "far" from the flash I can establish a time difference, and a distance difference.
"Yes- but his is the viewpoint that counts"Any two items in relative motion are moving- or not- depending on your point of view.So, almost nothing has a well defined speed - it's always a matter of viewpoint.For light it's different- everyone measures the speed as C.
Like I've shown a dozen times on this thread:t'/t = f'/f = (1 - v/c) / γ = γ / (1 + v/c) = (1 - a/c) / (1 + b/c) γb/γa where v = (a + b) / (1 + a b /c²)
"But m'lord, from my point of view, the car was stationary; the police helicopter caught up with me so, from his point of view I was actually going backwards and so it's only from the unique perspective of the arresting officer that I was actually doing more than 70 MPH".