TIME DILATION. WHY do clocks that are

In summary, the animation depicts how the clocks on two people who are moving relative to each other will tick slower than if the people were stationary.
  • #106
Can i say something here for first time :P
Time is derivative of mass :P
If mass dosent exist or = zero than there is no dimension Time :)
time not exist if M=0 or we have pure energy :)
have fun :)
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #107
PAllen said:
No this is total nonsense. Suppose each pulse in one femtosecond. Then there is no overlap at all between two simultaneously emitted pulses, one right behind the other. They will be received separately, and the receiver (having set up the experiment and measured everything) can easily determine that the delay between them verifies simultaneous emission.

Try to write clear English. That is a real problem - much of what you write is incomprehensible as English.
The femtosecond does not make you see red door and blue door behind it. You see purple door.
Your example with the pulses is not identical with the door experiment.
Remember that the front door is blocking the information for the back one, and if they are transparent, the colors are mix into one.
Your example does not set the front pulse as blockage for the back one.
There is time when we see only the front door.
Where in your experiment is the time when we see only the front pulse.
 
  • #108
sisoev said:
The femtosecond does not make you see red door and blue door behind it. You see purple door.
Your example with the pulses is not identical with the door experiment.
Remember that the front door is blocking the information for the back one, and if they are transparent, the colors are mix into one.
Your example does not set the front pulse as blockage for the back one.
There is time when we see only the front door.
Where in your experiment is the time when we see only the front pulse.

A front transparent door doesn't cause mixing. If a signal from front and back door emitted simultaneously, they will arrive one after the other. If they arrive at the same time, that tells you they were not emitted simultaneously, and further (assuming you set up the experiment) it tells exactly what the difference in emission time is.

Repeating trivially false statements does not make them true.
 
  • #109
sisoev said:
The femtosecond does not make you see red door and blue door behind it. You see purple door.
Your example with the pulses is not identical with the door experiment.
Remember that the front door is blocking the information for the back one, and if they are transparent, the colors are mix into one.
Your example does not set the front pulse as blockage for the back one.
There is time when we see only the front door.
Where in your experiment is the time when we see only the front pulse.
None of which is in any way relevant for the ladder paradox.
 
  • #110
sisoev said:
When you think SIMULTANEITY in your experiment, think that when the back(blue) light cease to exits the front(red) line die simultaneously with it
It is hard to tell what you mean, but when a light source stops emitting light the light that it has already emitted does not suddenly cease to exist but instead continues to propagate onward at c. Otherwise you would violate the conservation of energy. So, if two sources stop emitting light simultaneously in some frame then an observer does not necessarily stop receiving the light simultaneously.

Would you like a mathematical derivation to back that up?
 
  • #111
ghwellsjr said:
Great, now do you think you could explain the Twin Paradox to someone who doesn't understand it?

Yeahp i believe i can, because after your example the way i had to translate it to myself so i can picture it better was with a sonar given out between two whales... Then the picture became quite clear :)
 
  • #112
PAllen said:
A front transparent door doesn't cause mixing. If a signal from front and back door emitted simultaneously, they will arrive one after the other. If they arrive at the same time, that tells you they were not emitted simultaneously, and further (assuming you set up the experiment) it tells exactly what the difference in emission time is.

Repeating trivially false statements does not make them true.
First of all in the garage door experiment we are dealing with the reflected light of the front door, which blocks us from seeing the back door.
We made them transparent for the sake of the argument.
We can make them transparent and emitting light, but that will not change anything.
If the back door is blue, we will have to see it through the front red transparent door, and we will see purple.
(I don't know how do you imagine a blue light to arrive unchanged trough red door.)
Now stop the back blue emission and the front red one at the same time.
What do you see?

Stop thinking about your opponent as an idiot and you may start seeing his point.
 
  • #113
sisoev said:
First of all in the garage door experiment we are dealing with the reflected light of the front door, which blocks us from seeing the back door.
We made them transparent for the sake of the argument.
We can make them transparent and emitting light, but that will not change anything.
If the back door is blue, we will have to see it through the front red transparent door, and we will see purple.
(I don't know how do you imagine a blue light to arrive unchanged trough red door.)
Now stop the back blue emission and the front red one at the same time.
What do you see?

Stop thinking about your opponent as an idiot and you may start seeing his point.

Who says the front door is red? Transparent and clear, with flashing red light source would make sense. Backdoor would have synchronized flashing blue source.

Anyway, what I was responding to was your claim that you can't determine collinear simultaneity as a general principle.
 
  • #114
sisoev said:
First of all in the garage door experiment we are dealing with the reflected light of the front door, which blocks us from seeing the back door.
We made them transparent for the sake of the argument.
We can make them transparent and emitting light, but that will not change anything.
If the back door is blue, we will have to see it through the front red transparent door, and we will see purple.
(I don't know how do you imagine a blue light to arrive unchanged trough red door.)
Now stop the back blue emission and the front red one at the same time.
What do you see?
Why does what you see matter? If the door is closed when the ladder is in the doorway then it crashes regardless of what is seen. If the door is open when the ladder is in the doorway then it passes regardless of what is seen.

It is a red herring, not a red door.
 
  • #115
I'm taking a little brake to clear my mind :)
 
  • #116
OK.
Let's see it differently in order for me to understand you and you to get my point.
It will be easy for us to imagine the doors as transparent red (front) and blue(back) doors.
The light reflected from the front door will show it to us as red, but it will go trough it, reflect in the back door and will bring to us information for purple back door.
Am I correct?

When the doors open simultaneously, we will see purple door which is not open, but since we know that the actual door is blue, that will tell us that the door is open and we see false image of it.
The explanation of the ladder experiment still fails for me :)

Please tell me where am I wrong.
 
  • #117
sisoev said:
When the doors open simultaneously, we will see purple door which is not open, but since we know that the actual door is blue, that will tell us that the door is open and we see false image of it.
The explanation of the ladder experiment still fails for me :)

Please tell me where am I wrong.
You are wrong in thinking that the color of the door has any relevance whatsoever to whether or not the ladder hits the door. If the color mattered then we could just paint all cars some collision-proof color and greatly enhance road safety.
 
  • #118
DaleSpam said:
You are wrong in thinking that the color of the door has any relevance whatsoever to whether or not the ladder hits the door.
You are right, but in the proposed experiment, the color which we see proves that the door is actually not there.
Aren't the experiments set to prove or disprove something?
 
  • #119
sisoev said:
You are right, but in the proposed experiment, the color which we see proves that the door is actually not there.
No it doesn't. Let me see if I understand your set-up for complete clarity. You are proposing a red transparent front door and a blue opaque back door with ambient white lighting from outside and no light sources either on the door or in the garage, correct?
 
  • #120
DaleSpam said:
No it doesn't.

Ha-ha :D
OK...
I'm done with this topic.
I'll come back with the experiment I mentioned earlier.

Love to all you guys :)
 
  • #121
sisoev said:
I'll come back with the experiment I mentioned earlier.
Still looking forward to it.
 
  • #122
sisoev said:
OK PAllen, I know where is the deceiving point in your thinking (no offence applied)

When you think SIMULTANEITY in your experiment, think that when the back(blue) light cease to exits the front(red) line die simultaneously with it

Here's the experiment shown by animation. The white dot is the observer, the red and blue dots are the light sources. Each light source turns on and off simultaneously. The light that was emitted before this continues on its way.

Thus the observer sees in order:
1.No light
2.Red light only
3. Blue and Red light mixed(purple light)
4. Blue light only
5. No light.

[PLAIN]http://home.earthlink.net/~jparvey/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderpictures/red-blue.gif
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #123
Janus said:
Here's the experiment shown by animation. The white dot is the observer, the red and blue dots are the light sources. Each light source turns on and off simultaneously. The light that was emitted before this continues on its way.

Thus the observer sees in order:
1.No light
2.Red light only
3. Blue and Red light mixed(purple light)
4. Blue light only
5. No light.

[PLAIN]http://home.earthlink.net/~jparvey/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderpictures/red-blue.gif[/QUOTE]
Thank You, Janus.
Thank You very much.
I abandoned this argument.
I was quick to use it and it wasn't in my favor :)
But thanks any way.

My last standing argument was few posts earlier, with the "purple door" experiment.

Once again Thank You :)
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #124
ghwellsjr said:
No, it's not a matter of which one is moving, it's a matter of which one is changing speed or direction and where the two are in relation to each other when this happens.

So let's extend the analogy a little bit to include your question:

Suppose you are stopped and the vehicle with the siren passes you and you hear the sound drop in pitch from the high rate to the low rate and after it is a mile down the road, you take off after it at the same speed it is going. Now you will hear the pitch go from the low rate to the actual pitch of the siren, won't you? So there you both are separated by a mile, both moving and it's just like you were both stationary in terms of what you are hearing. But now if you increase your speed, you will immediately hear the pitch go higher, right? But instead of that, suppose the other vehicle slows down, will you immediately hear the pitch get higher? No, not until five seconds goes by.

Once you grasp the idea that distance causes a delay in what you observe if the other person changes speed but no delay if you are the one that changes speed, then you can easily understand the Twin Paradox with no math, no equations, no formulas.

Does this make perfect sense to you now?

ghwellsjr, I'd like to give you credit for the explanations you gave in this topic.
Earlier I said that the change of direction is not of any importance for the difference in the observations.
I see now that I was wrong.
Thank You :)

Now I guess I'll have to figure out how that affects the difference in the ageing.
 
  • #126
DaleSpam said:
The period of a pendulum is approximately [itex]2\pi\sqrt{L/g}[/itex] so the dependence is very explicit. The period of an atomic clock is proportional to [itex](m/M)\alpha^4mc^2[/itex], so I am not aware of any dependence on gravity or acceleration. A mechanical clock could probably be constructed either way, but I don't know a general formula for mechanical clocks.
Sorry for the late reply.
I don't see how the dependence is explicit for a pendulem clock could you elude to a more simple explanation as there seems to me to be an exclusion with regards atomic clocks.
Imagine a black hole with your atomic clock being sucked in and spagetification.Gravity and acceleration must play there part.
As for mechanical clocks is there any basic difference to pendulem ones.
 
  • #127
Buckleymanor said:
I don't see how the dependence is explicit for a pendulem
g is the gravitational field, or more precisely, the proper acceleration.

Buckleymanor said:
Imagine a black hole with your atomic clock being sucked in and spagetification.
I don't get your point. You could smash it with a hammer too. Once it is broken it is no longer an identically constructed clock.
 
  • #128
abbott287 said:
Why do clocks that are moving closer to light speed relative to another clock tick slower? I understand that the waves take longer to reach the stationary observer on the turn around, but that's just appearance. It still seems the clocks would be in sync upon the return. What is making time actually slow down (comparatively in that frame) by moving faster??

HallsofIvy said:
I'm not clear on what kind of answer you want. My reaction would be to say "that's the way the universe is". But you seem to want some kind of "mechanistic" answer.

Janus said:
It isn't really due to any effect that traveling at high speed has on your clocks, it has to do with the fact that observers moving relative to each other measure time differently.

abbott287 said:
Thats the hard part. I totally understand why people would measure times differently, (The ball in motion moving farther from a side "still" F.O.R.) but its due to appearance. Why someone would actually age less and why the clocks would not be in sync upon return totally fail me.

As HallsofIvy indicated, the OP seems to want a mechanistic explanation of relativistic differential aging. Janus seems to be saying that differential aging isn't a mechanistic effect, or at least that it doesn't require a mechanistic explanation.

So I'm wondering along with the OP: (1) is relativistic differential aging a mechanistic effect?, and (2) if it is a mechanistic effect, then is there a mechanistic explanation for the effect?

If it isn't a mechanistic effect, then it would follow that the periods of oscillators are not affected by the speed at which they travel. But that would contradict the results of numerous experiments.

Thus it would seem to be the case that relativistic differential aging is an interactional (mechanistic) phenomenon that isn't yet well understood.

So, my answer to the OP for (1) is yes, the speed at which an oscillator is moving is directly affecting the period of the oscillator, and for (2) is no (afaik).
 
  • #129
I would say it is a geometric effect and that the geometry is well understood.
 
  • #130
DaleSpam said:
I would say it is a geometric effect and that the geometry is well understood.
I agree. But I'm still wondering if (even the beginnings of) a mechanistic (interactional) explanation exists, or if it might be possible. Like, say, something along the line of a quantum mechanical description of relativistic differential aging. Saying that differential aging is a consequence of the speed of light being the same for all observers doesn't quite do it for me, because clocks undergo real physical changes based on their movement. Something measurable happens to oscillators when they're significantly speeded up, and the geometric explanation doesn't really account for this. Does it?
 
  • #131
ThomasT said:
Something measurable happens to oscillators when they're significantly speeded up, and the geometric explanation doesn't really account for this. Does it?
It does, completely. In addition, any mechanistic explanation would be hampered by the question "why don't the co-moving observers measure any difference". The geometric explanation accounts for that also.
 
  • #132
ThomasT said:
I agree. But I'm still wondering if (even the beginnings of) a mechanistic (interactional) explanation exists, or if it might be possible. Like, say, something along the line of a quantum mechanical description of relativistic differential aging. Saying that differential aging is a consequence of the speed of light being the same for all observers doesn't quite do it for me, because clocks undergo real physical changes based on their movement. Something measurable happens to oscillators when they're significantly speeded up, and the geometric explanation doesn't really account for this. Does it?

Sure, as most people here know an interactional explanation existed from the very start - the Lorentz ether. It just happens to be currently not a popular concept. The geometric explanation is now the most popular and it surely does account for the effects, but on another, more mathematical level. Geometrical and physical explanations are not necessarily mutually exclusive, they are different ways of looking at the same.
 
  • #133
DaleSpam said:
It does, completely.
I thought that it explained it as a function of changes in the distance/time ratio. But oscillators actually slow down as their speed increases. That is, they actually undergo physical changes. Don't they? How does the geometric description explain that?

DaleSpam said:
In addition, any mechanistic explanation would be hampered by the question "why don't the co-moving observers measure any difference". The geometric explanation accounts for that also.
I'm not sure what you're referring to. You mean the symmetric time-dilation effect?
 
  • #134
harrylin said:
Geometrical and physical explanations are not necessarily mutually exclusive, they are different ways of looking at the same.
I agree. I didn't mean to suggest that one contradicts or excludes the other. Just that one, the mechanistic (interactional) description is the deeper sort of explanation. The sort of thing we appeal to for real understanding of a phenomenon.
 
  • #135
ThomasT said:
Just that one, the mechanistic (interactional) description is the deeper sort of explanation.
That is entirely a matter of personal preference, and one I happen to disagree with completely.
 
  • #136
on op648's post, I think Einstein said something like that! He said something along the lines that sitting with a pretty girl at a cafe, 3 hrs seems like 3 minutes, but sitting on a hot stove, 3 minutes seems like 3 hrs, and if you understand that, you understand relativity. It was probably his humorous way of trying to explain relativity to people unschooled in physics :-), and likely too that many people took him seriously. Perhaps the one sitting on the stove jumps off at a good fraction of the speed of light...
 
  • #137
ThomasT said:
But I'm still wondering if (even the beginnings of) a mechanistic (interactional) explanation exists, or if it might be possible. Like, say, something along the line of a quantum mechanical description of relativistic differential aging.
Not sure what you mean by "mechanistic (interactional)", but all the interactions within a mechanical clock are also based on electromagnetic fields, in which changes propagate at the same speed for every observer.
 
  • #138
A.T. said:
Not sure what you mean by "mechanistic (interactional)", but all the interactions within a mechanical clock are also based on electromagnetic fields, in which changes propagate at the same speed for every observer.

Yes, and that provides at least intuitively a nice "mechanistic" (or physical) answer to the OP's question of "What is making time actually slow down (comparatively in that frame) by moving faster??";
In particular with the help of such animations as this one:
[URL]http://home.earthlink.net/~parvey/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderpictures/length_con2.gif[/URL]
I think that Janus made that animation; Janus how did you do it? they are very useful. :smile:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #139
ThomasT said:
I thought that it explained it as a function of changes in the distance/time ratio. But oscillators actually slow down as their speed increases. That is, they actually undergo physical changes. Don't they? How does the geometric description explain that?
The same way that the side of a right triangle is actually physically shorter than the hypotenuse. It is just geometry, only using the Minkowski metric instead of the Euclidean metric.
 
  • #140
harrylin said:
I think that Janus made that animation; Janus how did you do it? they are very useful. :smile:
He explained how he did it in post #6:
Janus said:
The frame are drawn with POV-Ray, then assembled by a GIF animator (I use Animation Shop 3).
 

Similar threads

  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
58
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
16
Views
651
  • Special and General Relativity
3
Replies
88
Views
3K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
9
Views
223
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
29
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
22
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
34
Views
550
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
45
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
58
Views
3K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
25
Views
2K
Back
Top