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No. Both twins experience one each of accelerations north-south, west-east, south-north, and east-west. Just in a different order.
Investigating the exact cause of asymmetry in twin paradox thought experiment through a rectangular route. It allows us to see if difference in time dilation experienced by the twins can be fully attributed to difference in acceleration, and how they correlate to each other.
Surprisingly few people are aware of Einstein's preferred solution to the Twin Paradox, which he detailed in a 1918 paper. We examine this solution, purported to take place within the framework of General Relativity, in hopes of finally finding an explanation to the twin paradox that can appease our empathic skepticism. Along the way we learn a thing or two about the nature of gravity, the distinctions between special and general relativity, and the philosophy of motion.
At point C, first twin changes his velocity by 90 degrees, while second twin changes his velocity by 180 degrees.
explanation to the twin paradox that can appease our empathic skepticism.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 15/12/2024 13:42:58At point C, first twin changes his velocity by 90 degrees, while second twin changes his velocity by 180 degrees.But number one also changes through 90 degrees at B. Instead of a square, gradually shorten the BC and DA legs. Is there a singularity when the distance ABCD suddenly longer or shorter than ADCDA? Instantaneous change of velocity implies infinite force, which will destroy a twin, so try radiusing the corners.
I reckon this discussion will be moving to the "new theories" zone fairly soon!
Perhaps I can show an example to determine whether or not acceleration can explain the asymmetrical effects of time dilation in twin paradox. Instead of going back and forth on a single straight line, we make both twins to go through a rectangular route.
But the second twin experiences higher acceleration to reverse direction.
Einstein, Gravity, and the Twin Paradox (Einstein's 1918 Solution)QuoteSurprisingly few people are aware of Einstein's preferred solution to the Twin Paradox, which he detailed in a 1918 paper. We examine this solution, purported to take place within the framework of General Relativity, in hopes of finally finding an explanation to the twin paradox that can appease our empathic skepticism. Along the way we learn a thing or two about the nature of gravity, the distinctions between special and general relativity, and the philosophy of motion.
Hamdani, you seem to have a talent for hunting down links to wrong answers to things. It seems very deliberate. Please stop posting explanations in the main sections of the forum. That section is for questions about established theory, not assertions about alternatives, especially ones that are obviously wrong. Ask questions there. Don't assert anything. Please!
It shows no such thing since your twins are never a different age when co-located.
If you are positing them getting up to speed instantly, all accelerations are infinite (singular), and one cannot meaningfully say that one infinity is greater than another.If you are positing that the acceleration is finite (100M g's say) but a very short duration, then everybody undergoes the exact same magnitude of acceleration at each corner since they must come to a stop, turn, and get going again.If you round the corners, then the picture should show that. Indeed the acceleration magnitudes would be different since one ship takes point C at speed and the other stops, but only for a really short duration.
What's considered established at some point, may no longer be the case a few decades or even years later.
What does it show when they are not co-located?
If the acceleration is done in circular manner, say 1 light second in circumference, while the twins travel at c/2, then to turn the direction by 90 degrees takes half second, while turning the direction by 180 degrees takes one second by maintaining their speed. Alternatively, if the second twin is only given half second to turn, he must turn around with smaller circle, thus higher centripetal acceleration.
All the trolls say this. If you don't want to be branded a troll, it probably isn't a good idea to quote their handbook.
Nobody overturned established theory by entering "Einstein wrong" as their search criteria, which is one way to find denialist videos.
Chatbots are also known to be consistently wrong when it comes to questions with so much misinformation in the training materials.
It's fairly trivial
what was the point of bringing it all up?