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Light travels well fast that at it's top speed it does not perceive time.....weird eh ?
If you were to slow light down, would the photons then experience time?
The key here is that it is "c" which is the important thing, not the light itself. As far as we know, light in a vacuum travels at c. But even if this turned out not to be the case, it would not change the importance of the speed c as an invariant speed. It would just mean that the photon is not the truly "massless" particle we now consider it to be.
Can I ask you what are some of the derivations that show that c is an invariant speed and which have no connection to the speed of light?
in an expanding universe, light will be redshifted...a photon experiences time because it does have a property that can change
Quote from: geordief on 14/05/2023 23:55:58Can I ask you what are some of the derivations that show that c is an invariant speed and which have no connection to the speed of light?In Special Theory of Relativity, invariance speed of light is taken as a postulate, hence not derived from some more fundamental axioms.
@OPMay i ask a follow-up Question?
Hypothetically, if ewe or I could travel at the speed of light armed with our sentience (yes it's impossible to travel at c).....and we travelled from the Sun to Earth....at the speed of c it would take 8 minutes yes ?, however, what would our perception of the time be ? instantaneous ?
Hi.@geordief asked about the speed c.LaTex isn't working so we can't have mathematical symbols here in the post, sorry. Basically, yes starting from the Lorentz transformation you would quickly obtain the relativistic velocity addition formula - see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velocity-addition_formula#Special_relativity That will show you that a velocity with magnitude c (which is just what appears in the Lorentz transformation and not necessarily the speed of light) is mapped to another velocity with the same magnitude in any other inertial reference frame. The entire discussion was about assuming light may not travel at the speed c. So, that's why @hamdani yusuf said what they said (I would think). In most textbook developments of special relativity it is common to start from an assumption about light and the invariance of its speed. In this situation, the whole point is that you don't - we assume light has some other speed. You could still obtain the Lorentz transformation even if nature had been very unkind to physicists and never given them a massless particle that could be detected. We were lucky, we had light, it did exhibit properties that strongly pointed us to the development of special relativity. Assume light wasn't available or did not behave like that. Provided special relativity is still a rule in nature, then there would have been signposts to it. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experimental_testing_of_time_dilation which describes how muons can be produced in earths upper atmosphere when cosmic rays come in. We use this as a test of special relativity, specifically we suspect that muons moving fast relative to the lab frame would live long enough to reach the surface of the earth before decaying. The main point is that the effects of relativity like this would still be there, in nature, and eventually we would notice: Someone would have studied the half-life and decay of particles and they would have noticed that fast moving particles seem to live longer, they would have said "that's weird, it's as if their clock is ticking slowly". We now also have particle accelerators and with equipment like that to play with it's almost certain that we would have noticed strange effects when objects have high velocities relative to each other. Basically, unless the important speed which we are calling c and appears in the Lorentz transformation was many orders of magnitude greater than it actually is, then there would have been signposts to relativity and eventually we would have noticed them. With some LaTex mathematical symbols (which, as I mentioned, we don't have the luxury of), we could demonstrate that the Poincare group of transformations is the only set of transformations between reference frames we should consider. Non-linear transformations are also possible but the words "non-linear" should strike fear into the hearts of anyone who has ever studied some mathematics. So you can rest assured that every linear transformation between reference frames would have been proposed and examined first. The basic Poincare transformations like a rotation of the space frame won't explain the results you were getting from experiments so before too long the subset of the Poincare transformations which are just the Lorentz boosts would be all you have left before you move to non-linear transformations. While mathematicians would be beginning to sweat and fear that non-linear transformations would be needed, the last set of linear transformations would turn out to be the charm, they would work. Obviously a Lorentz boost will work, we know that a Lorentz transformation was precisely what we needed. There would be a constant which we can call c in those transformations, it would have the dimensions of a speed etc. The value of c would be chosen to match the experimental results we were obtaining. Once you have the Lorentz transformations, the rest of the theory of special relativity follows. So, summarising all of that, we could reasonably have obtained the Lorentz transformations just from empirical observations of strange effects when two objects have high velocities relative to each other. Having a massless particle like light which did travel at c was a great help and it is a clear signpost to relativity. It probably speeded up the recognition and development of relativity by many years. Indeed taking, as an axiom, that the speed of light is an invariant will allow you (a lecturer) to develop the theory of relativity on the blackboard in front your students in 1 hour rather than over several lectures. The key is that it wasn't essential, special relativity is just all the physics which you can obtain from the Lorentz transformation. You can get to that (the Lorentz transformation) by other routes, you do not need to assume the speed of light is an invariant. (However, in the world in which we do live, the speed of light is c, so you aren't doing any harm by taking that as an axiom and you will see it done in many textbooks and hear it suggested by many people. You need this much space on a forum to explain why it isn't quite like that). I hope that helps.Best Wishes.
Quote from: Zer0 on 14/05/2023 19:45:01@OPMay i ask a follow-up Question?yes yes , of course
What about mass and energy ? What would the corresponding use for c in that situation?
Can there be other situations where c is the conversion factor between physical properties?
What is mass divided by energy ,I wonder?