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If another space ship is also observing the light clock at the same speed, but the direction is up, will they agree on the amount of time dilation?
Re-read my prior reply, which applies to all these questions.
Quote from: Halc on 01/01/2021 06:36:25Re-read my prior reply, which applies to all these questions.That's an assumption.
Can you prove it using equations?
Is it compatible with Galilean, Lorentzian, or Einsteinean relativity?
λ = 1/√(1-v²/c²)There's nothing in that equation that changes with choice of direction of motion
Quote from: Halc on 01/01/2021 13:21:55λ = 1/√(1-v²/c²)There's nothing in that equation that changes with choice of direction of motionThe commonly used symbol is gamma. One method to derive its value is using a light clock moving perpendicular to the light trajectory. The constraint to keep the light speed c leads to the conclusion that time has dilated by gamma factor. The question is, do we get the same result if the clock is moving in the same direction as the light trajectory, while keeping the light speed at constant value c?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michelson%E2%80%93Morley_experiment#Light_path_analysis_and_consequencesIn the equations above, transversal time is dilated by gamma, while longitudinal time is dilated by gamma squared.To make transversal time equals longitudinal time, the longitudinal path length must be contracted by gamma.
Which is is what Relativity predicts will happen.
Let's take further test. There are two light clocks with exactly same length put side to side. In the first clock, the space between mirrors is kept at vacuum, while the second clock is filled with transparent medium which makes light travel at half of c. The stationary observer sees that every 4 microseconds both clocks tick simultaneously by photons hitting their bottom mirrors.
Does vertically moving observer sees the same phenomenon? What about the horizontally moving observer?
Quote from: Janus on 02/01/2021 16:51:41Which is is what Relativity predicts will happen.Yes. So far looks good. Let's take further test. There are two light clocks with exactly same length put side to side. In the first clock, the space between mirrors is kept at vacuum, while the second clock is filled with transparent medium which makes light travel at half of c. The stationary observer sees that every 4 microseconds both clocks tick simultaneously by photons hitting their bottom mirrors. Does vertically moving observer sees the same phenomenon? What about the horizontally moving observer?
If one two otherwise identical light clocks has a high refractive index medium, then they're not both going to tick every 4 usec. The one is going to tick at half the rate of the other. Maybe the mirrors are closer if you want that?
Quote from: Halc on 03/01/2021 22:27:53If one two otherwise identical light clocks has a high refractive index medium, then they're not both going to tick every 4 usec. The one is going to tick at half the rate of the other. Maybe the mirrors are closer if you want that?No. Every 4 microsecond, vacuum clock ticks twice, while filled clock only ticks once