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Would I be on the right track if I was to interpret these understandings in the following way?We do not travel through space and neither (more intuitively) do we travel through time.
I'd say you travel through space. I'm here at km-12, and an minute later I'm at km-13, which is travel of one km of space in one minute. That's what travel is.Spacetime has time built in, and one cannot travel through it. Rather any object traces a worldline through it, but since it is present at all locations along that wordline, nothing moves through it. It isn't travel.
Quote from: Halc on 22/08/2021 06:40:20I'd say you travel through space. I'm here at km-12, and an minute later I'm at km-13, which is travel of one km of space in one minute. That's what travel is.Spacetime has time built in, and one cannot travel through it. Rather any object traces a worldline through it, but since it is present at all locations along that wordline, nothing moves through it. It isn't travel.Is that, though tracing a line in terms of the model or in terms of what the object is "actually" experiencing? (hope I didn't just drop down the rabbit hole)
Most objects don't experience such things, but you experience moving through space over time because such an experience makes you far more fit than the same creature that doesn't interpret it this way.
Are you saying that it is a practically infinitely close approximation that serves us extremely well since we are not relativistic biological creatures?
A particle moving through space more than time is called a Braydion. A particle moving in time more than space is a Tardyon.
Would I be on the right track if I was to interpret these understandings in the following way? We do not travel through space and neither (more intuitively) do we travel through time.
What have I got wrong with this metaphor?
The twin paradox comes about because the "stay at home" twin has a constant time coordinate
and so has a "shorter" worldline through spacetime than the "leave home" twin
A spacelike worldline (where spatial separation is greater than temporal separation) results in a negative interval s², meaning s would be imaginary. Nothing can 'follow' such a worldline.