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A is in motion, relative to B.A measures time as passing at 1s/s, in her RF.B measures time as passing at 1s/s, in his RF.
How could either of them possibly measure that? What would they expect it look like to them to measure a different value?It's like verifying that your measuring tape measures one meter per meter. We know, because we held a tape measure up to it.
A and B both measure time in the other’s RF as being dilated.
No. A and B each measure the other clock as dilated in their own frame, not in the other frame.
The measurements made by A and B, of time in the other’s RF, are in the past, relative to each other, and are both right, so there is no “absolute” past.
A and B are frames or observers, and not events. What you measure is events, and those measured events are in the past of the measurement events. This is true of those two events in any frame.
This must demonstrate that there is no universal rate of “passage of time” that can be identified.
The above example does not demonstrate this, either way. There could be a universal rate.
The rate of expansion of the universe can be measured only in terms of the rates of motion of given bodies, relative to other bodies.That rate is actually a good way to determine universal time, because in any non-isotropic foliation of spacetime (translation: in any non-preferred frame), the expansion rate is not uniform. It is greater one way than the other.
Quote from: HalcHow could either of them possibly measure that? What would they expect it look like to them to measure a different value?It's like verifying that your measuring tape measures one meter per meter. We know, because we held a tape measure up to it.]A has no way of measuring time as passing at any rate, other than 1s/s in her RF.
This is point I was working towards. Pop. Sci. books often say things like: “A sees B’s clock as running slower…”.
Although we know that A cannot observe B’s clock; we tend to accept this statement, because it is a thought experiment.
Are we, in fact, saying that A calculates that B’s clock would be perceived as running slower than hers, if she could see it; and that this, and any calculation of the amount of the difference, are based on the equations of SR? Of course, we know, from (e.g.) satnav, that these equations reflect “reality”, so this is probably nit-picking. I’m not really after BC’s Pedantry Award.
If we identify A and B as inter-visible, physical objects, and as observers occupying those objects; we can consider optical observations (either direct, or via light signals), and “observations” via radio signals. In all cases, the information received by the observer will be relevant to an event that took place in the past, relative to the observer’s present.
This provides an illustration of our inability to identify a universal rate of “passage of time”.
Doesn’t SR say that all RFs are non-preferred frame?
Isn’t the expansion rate of the universe measured as being the same in every direction?
Given that these points are correct: where might we find a “non-isotropic foliation of spacetime” in which to observe the expansion rate as no-uniform?
t = log10(1 + 10a)
Quotet = log10(1 + 10a)For: Every time we go back an order of magnitude in time towards the Big Bang, the mass/energy density of the universe increases by 3 orders of magnitude, and quite different events and even different physics appears. So this logarithmic way of looking back at the big bang is a useful way to view it.Against: Isn't this just a more sophisticated way of avoiding discussion on t=0 (let alone t<0)?
I'm wondering Chiral. This is collected thoughts on 'c' as a variable. http://www.ldolphin.org/cdkconseq.htmlwith a time dilation you could argue that 'c' changes too, from the 'eyes of a God' so to speak. See if you can find something interesting
'c' is a variable in that it is is observer dependent.
Quote from: yor_on on 12/02/2019 05:55:38'c' is a variable in that it is is observer dependent. My understanding is that this is not the case. The theories of special and general relativity are built around the concept that all observers agree on c, no matter what reference frame they are in...