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Forward and reverse time jump only appear to the accelerating observer when the observed object is not co-located. The observed object itself isn't affected by the acceleration of the observer.
What's considered established at some point, may no longer be the case a few decades or even years later.
It doesn't matter who said that. What's important is whether it's true or not.
What's more important is whether the equations accurately represent physical reality.
You seem to think that you know better than professional scientists working in this field, including Einstein.
Quote from: chatgptEinstein reportedly said that he "didn't recognize" his theory of special relativity anymore because of how its interpretations and applications evolved far beyond his original formulation. When he developed the theory in 1905, his focus was on solving specific physical problems, such as reconciling Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism with the principle of relativity.However, as the theory gained widespread acceptance, it became a foundational framework for theoretical physics and was interpreted in ways Einstein had not anticipated, especially in the hands of other physicists. For instance:1. Mathematical Formalism: Mathematicians and physicists like Hermann Minkowski reformulated special relativity in a four-dimensional spacetime framework. While this interpretation became standard, Einstein initially resisted Minkowski's geometrical approach, as it was different from his more intuitive understanding of the theory.
Einstein reportedly said that he "didn't recognize" his theory of special relativity anymore because of how its interpretations and applications evolved far beyond his original formulation. When he developed the theory in 1905, his focus was on solving specific physical problems, such as reconciling Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism with the principle of relativity.However, as the theory gained widespread acceptance, it became a foundational framework for theoretical physics and was interpreted in ways Einstein had not anticipated, especially in the hands of other physicists. For instance:1. Mathematical Formalism: Mathematicians and physicists like Hermann Minkowski reformulated special relativity in a four-dimensional spacetime framework. While this interpretation became standard, Einstein initially resisted Minkowski's geometrical approach, as it was different from his more intuitive understanding of the theory.
#369: time dilation is a coordinate phenomenon, differential ageing is a real world effect.
This diagram from Wikipedia is supposed to be the established explanation for twin paradox.
It predicts apparent time jump in the observation by traveling twin
to also accept reverse time jump or rewind when the direction of the acceleration is away from the observed twin.
"Reverse Time Jump" ---> It sounds like you're describing something amazing, maybe time travel into the past.
No it doesn't. In fact, it doesn't mention observation at all since there are no light lines in the picture. If the twin looks at Earth when turning around, he sees the same thing just before and just after the acceleration. The observation only changes in redshift, but no time jump is observed. What is observed would be physical fact, and nobody regardless of where they are could contest it.
A rotational versionTwins Bob and Alice inhabit a space station in circular orbit around a massive body in space. Bob suits up and exits the station. While Alice remains inside the station, continuing to orbit with it as before, Bob uses a rocket propulsion system to cease orbiting and hover where he was. When the station completes an orbit and returns to Bob, he rejoins Alice. Alice is now younger than Bob.[36] In addition to rotational acceleration, Bob must decelerate to become stationary and then accelerate again to match the orbital speed of the space station.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_paradox#A_rotational_version
Every now and then I checked if there's someone upload a reasonable effort to explain about the twin paradox worth sharing. I think this one will do.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQ2fYPYdJj8Twin Paradox is NOT a Paradox: An Explanation that Makes SenseQuoteEinstein's Theory of Special Relativity is confusing. It?s even harder to grasp when all the explanations disagree about how to interpret it. And to top it all off, the explanations all use a PARADOX.I decided I needed to step in and give one more explanation to destroy the paradox once and for all. Did I succeed? Let me know in the comments what I should clarify in my next video.Chapters:00:00 - Intro00:48 - The Story03:03 - The Paradox04:56 - The Problem07:59 - Breaking the Symmetry10:15 - Constructed Inertial Frames12:27 - Video Evidence15:21 - There is No Paradox17:33 - Connecting the Dots
Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity is confusing. It?s even harder to grasp when all the explanations disagree about how to interpret it. And to top it all off, the explanations all use a PARADOX.I decided I needed to step in and give one more explanation to destroy the paradox once and for all. Did I succeed? Let me know in the comments what I should clarify in my next video.Chapters:00:00 - Intro00:48 - The Story03:03 - The Paradox04:56 - The Problem07:59 - Breaking the Symmetry10:15 - Constructed Inertial Frames12:27 - Video Evidence15:21 - There is No Paradox17:33 - Connecting the Dots
Spacetime diagrams are great tools for understanding Relativity.This is a crash course in how to read one.
Once again, it's only a paradox if you start from classical physics and try to guess what happens in extreme circumstances. If you start with relativistic physics there is no paradox and the answer converges to the classical result if v << c.Why do people waste time with this stuff?
There isn't a problem, just a common misconception that Δt = 0 for all systems, simply because it is a near-enough approximation for many purposes.If you are brought up to believe that π = 3, you will be amazed by the "tape measure paradox". You might even become a philosopher!
If you show that Δt→0 as v→0, there is no paradox, just a convenient approximation.
one twin travels at high a speed
The "original" was not a paradox but the testable (and now demonstrated) solution to a relativistic equation. Only a philosopher could call it a paradox.
More correctly, accelerates to a high speed. If there was relative motion at the start of the experiment, they couldn't synchronise identical clocks.
Your statement here implies that your are trying to redefine the word paradox, or you are trying to rewrite the history of science.
a seemingly absurd or contradictory statement or proposition which when investigated may prove to be well founded or true:
The calculated time jump is only significant when they are separated in space.
I don't want to rewrite history, but I do want to teach what we know, and when we can use a convenient approximation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_paradox#HistoryIn 1911, Paul Langevin gave a "striking example" by describing the story of a traveler making a trip at a Lorentz factor of γ = 100 (99.995% the speed of light). The traveler remains in a projectile for one year of his time, and then reverses direction. Upon return, the traveler will find that he has aged two years, while 200 years have passed on Earth. During the trip, both the traveler and Earth keep sending signals to each other at a constant rate, which places Langevin's story among the Doppler shift versions of the twin paradox. The relativistic effects upon the signal rates are used to account for the different aging rates. The asymmetry that occurred because only the traveler underwent acceleration is used to explain why there is any difference at all,[17][18] because "any change of velocity, or any acceleration has an absolute meaning".[A 3]Max von Laue (1911, 1913) elaborated on Langevin's explanation. Using Hermann Minkowski's spacetime formalism, Laue went on to demonstrate that the world lines of the inertially moving bodies maximize the proper time elapsed between two events. He also wrote that the asymmetric aging is completely accounted for by the fact that the astronaut twin travels in two separate frames, while the Earth twin remains in one frame, and the time of acceleration can be made arbitrarily small compared with the time of inertial motion.[A 4][A 5][A 6] Eventually, Lord Halsbury and others removed any acceleration by introducing the "three-brother" approach. The traveling twin transfers his clock reading to a third one, traveling in the opposite direction. Another way of avoiding acceleration effects is the use of the relativistic Doppler effect (see ? What it looks like: the relativistic Doppler shift below).Neither Einstein nor Langevin considered such results to be problematic: Einstein only called it "peculiar" while Langevin presented it as a consequence of absolute acceleration.[A 7] Both men argued that, from the time differential illustrated by the story of the twins, no self-contradiction could be constructed. In other words, neither Einstein nor Langevin saw the story of the twins as constituting a challenge to the self-consistency of relativistic physics.
Heavy objects fall at the same rate as light ones. Paradox or observation?