Twin paradox, what about ageing?

In summary, the twin paradox experiment explains time dilation in space time, where one twin who travels in space ages slower than the other twin who stays on Earth. This is due to the difference in frames of reference and not gravity. When the twins reunite, the space twin will physically look younger than the Earth twin. However, for the space twin, everything will seem to be happening normally while time in the Earth twin's frame of reference will have slowed down. Space travel may slow down ageing, but only when compared to those left behind, as time itself has slowed down for the space traveler's frame of reference. It is important to understand frames of reference in order to fully grasp the effects of time dilation in space.
  • #1
oraclelive
25
0
I may not be right exactly but however i stand corrected where necessary.
Twin paradox experiment explains time dilation in space time. My understanding is like this, assuming twins at 10yrs each. If one makes a space travel and the other is at stationed on Earth (both being at initial reference frame). After say 20yrs, the space twin returns to Earth and found out that he's younger (ie, less than 30yrs) than his twin on Earth in time. Which implies that gravity slows time in space. Now what about ageing?
 
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  • #2
It isn't gravity that causes the (time)age difference, but the speed at which the space twin travels. For the space twin to age 10 yrs while his Earth twin aged 20, he would have had to make the trip at 0.866c.

I'm not quite sure about what your last question is asking, but I'll take a guess. When they reunite, the Earth twin will have aged 20 yrs and be 30 years old and the Space twin will have aged 10 yrs and be 20 yrs old.
 
  • #3
Thanks for the clarity about the cause of the time difference. But the question ain't clear yet. Look at it this way, the space twin is younger when they reunite. In ageing, does the space twin look younger (facially) than the Earth twin and if not, why?
 
  • #4
oraclelive said:
In ageing, does the space twin look younger (facially) than the Earth twin and if not, why?
Sure. That twin really is younger in the normal sense of the word.
 
  • #5
oraclelive said:
Thanks for the clarity about the cause of the time difference. But the question ain't clear yet. Look at it this way, the space twin is younger when they reunite. In ageing, does the space twin look younger (facially) than the Earth twin and if not, why?

Yes, that is what "the space twin is younger when they reunite" means, he will have only physically aged 10 yrs while his brother has physically aged 20 yrs.
 
  • #6
If so, does it now mean that the speed at which the space twin travels affect the growth hormones of the body system?
 
  • #7
Time in the space twin's frame of reference slows down wrt the earthbound twin's frame of reference.
His clock slows down
His heartbeat slows
All known physical and biological functions within his reference frame slow down

...all with respect to his earhbound twin.

In his spaceship, everything is normal for him. Everything is time dilated in the same way.

He ages more slowly than the earthbound twin as a result of this.
 
  • #8
Thanks Huttate for the much clearification. If this true in practice, it implies that space travel will actually help man slow down in age.
 
  • #9
oraclelive said:
If this true in practice, it implies that space travel will actually help man slow down in age.
Yes, but only compared to those left behind. From the perspective of the space travelers themselves, they age just like usual.
 
  • #10
The point is that it is not just "aging" that is slowed down. For the traveler, as compared to the stay at home, time itself has slowed down. When the traveler returns he will have experienced ten years of travel- he will have lived for 10 years while the stay at home twin will have lived for 20 years.
 
  • #11
Oraclelive : You must have this clear in your mind:

The space traveller's ageing process does not slow down!

Let me be as clear as I can.

The space traveller experiences everything just as he would on earth. His seconds are seconds as he experienced them on earth. He beard grows as it did on earth. He ages as he did on earth.

He is only ageing more slowly with respect to the earthbound twin.

Relativity is all about frames of reference. It is essential that you understand this point otherwise you will end up confused and misinformed.

To be more clear [I hope] both twins see everything as happening quite normally in their own frames of reference. It is only when we compare how time and space behaves in the two separate frames of reference with respect to each other that we notice that one twin has aged more slowly than the other.
 
  • #12
Huttate: You must have this clear in your mind:

Nature does what it does. It doesn't know anything about frames of reference.

Let me be as clear as I can.

The Theory of Special Relativity is all about frames of reference and are purely a human construct that helps us understand and coordinate things that are happening to different objects and observers who are traveling at different relative speeds.

To be more clear [I hope] both twins see everything as happening quite normally to themselves but abnornally to the other twin. It is only when we compare how time and space behaves in a single arbitrarily selected frame of reference that we can analyze how one twin has aged more slowly than the other.

Where did you get the idea that it was necessary or advantageous to assign each twin to their own frame at the exclusion of the other one?
 
  • #13
ghwellsjr: pedantic and adds nothing.

I was emphasising frames of reference as this IS the starting point for understanding event separation across spacetime.

The poster appeared convinced that spaceflight would lengthen his life and I wanted to disabuse him of the notion.

The final paragraph is clear as it stands and to change to the 3rd person and not stress the reference frames would miss the point.

I don't care what your anthopomorphic nature thinks.
 
  • #14
Huttate: you should go back and read what you said in your previous two posts. In the first one you said:
Huttate said:
Time in the space twin's frame of reference slows down wrt the earthbound twin's frame of reference.
His clock slows down
His heartbeat slows
All known physical and biological functions within his reference frame slow down

...all with respect to his earhbound twin.

In his spaceship, everything is normal for him. Everything is time dilated in the same way.

He ages more slowly than the earthbound twin as a result of this.
And then you say the opposite in your second post:
Huttate said:
Oraclelive : You must have this clear in your mind:

The space traveller's ageing process does not slow down!

Let me be as clear as I can.

The space traveller experiences everything just as he would on earth. His seconds are seconds as he experienced them on earth. He beard grows as it did on earth. He ages as he did on earth.

He is only ageing more slowly with respect to the earthbound twin.

Relativity is all about frames of reference. It is essential that you understand this point otherwise you will end up confused and misinformed.

To be more clear [I hope] both twins see everything as happening quite normally in their own frames of reference. It is only when we compare how time and space behaves in the two separate frames of reference with respect to each other that we notice that one twin has aged more slowly than the other.
Here's what you should have said:

Time for the space twin slows down in the initial reference frame that oraclelive mentioned in his first post. But he cannot tell that anything has slowed down because everything in his spaceship is time dilated in the same way and so everything is normal for him.

Expressions like "the space twin's frame of reference" or "the earthbound twin's frame of reference" are commonly understood to mean a frame of reference in which an observer is at rest. The fundamental tenet of Einstein's Special Relativity is that observers and objects at rest in any inertial reference frame will experience no time dilation but other observers and objects not at rest in that same reference frame will experience time dilation. This is why you need to present one frame of reference when talking about the reduced ageing of the traveling twin.
 
  • #15
Yea, thanks folks for your contributions. Time indeed slows everything in spaceflight.
 
  • #16
Since there is talk in this thread regarding how someones beared grows, hormones release timely ect, while traveling close to C, has anything even remotely identifiable as matter to the naked eye acheived this?

I get that particles can travel at significant fractions of C, but molocules?

I thought the "time traveling" example was an annalogy for what happens to particles.
 
  • #17
GPS satellites travel at a high enough fraction of C for these effects to have a critical impact on their functionality.
 
  • #18
russ_watters said:
GPS satellites travel at a high enough fraction of C for these effects to have a critical impact on their functionality.

Oh, I didn't think of those. I supose astronauts too.

Still, there is fast and then there is .85C.

So going fast through space have no effect on the thing going fast? No forces pop-up?

That's pretty cool, its like the one free thing.
 
  • #19
nitsuj said:
Oh, I didn't think of those. I supose astronauts too.

Still, there is fast and then there is .85C.

So going fast through space have no effect on the thing going fast? No forces pop-up?

That's pretty cool, its like the one free thing.
Free? Even if we could overcome the technical obstacles to sending people out into deep space and returning them safely to Earth to demonstrate the twin paradox, it would be nowhere near free. It would be so expensive, I seriously doubt that it will ever be done.
 
  • #20
ghwellsjr said:
Free? Even if we could overcome the technical obstacles to sending people out into deep space and returning them safely to Earth to demonstrate the twin paradox, it would be nowhere near free. It would be so expensive, I seriously doubt that it will ever be done.

Opps, I didn't mean free from $$ (on a side note, I find it funny to say we won't ever "time travel" because it's too expensive, perhaps the debtor could be the one traveling, however i totaly understand what you are saying).

I meant free from other forces. things in space get to coast for free, no matter how fast, which is definitely not the case on earth.
 
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  • #21
We don't even get to coast in space for free because there are obstacles in our way--those pesky little particles that take expensive accelerators to make them into atom smashers become atom smashers all over space because real space isn't really just space, its full of particles. That was one of the technical obstacles I mentioned earlier and the reason I used the word "obstacles".
 
  • #22
nitsuj said:
I meant free from other forces. things in space get to coast for free, no matter how fast, which is definitely not the case on earth.
While that's true, getting to coast without slowing down isn't as big of a benefit as the energy required to accelerate to a decent fraction of C is a hinderance.
 
  • #23
Oh i just thought of it, its not free, the energy to get it up to speed is stored isn't it?
 
  • #24
ghwellsjr "...those pesky little particles that take expensive accelerators to make them into atom smashers..."


I thought they used big particles, and are rare in our neck of the woods. (cause of the sun?)
 
  • #25
nitsuj said:
Oh i just thought of it, its not free, the energy to get it up to speed is stored isn't it?
I'm not exactly sure what you mean by "stored" but accelerating an object with mass happens via a=f/m and that requirement for force does not change when you leave the atmosphere.
 

1. What is the Twin Paradox?

The Twin Paradox is a thought experiment that explores the effects of time dilation in special relativity. It involves two identical twins, one of whom travels at high speeds through space while the other stays on Earth. When they reunite, the traveling twin will have aged less than the stationary twin.

2. How does time dilation occur in the Twin Paradox?

Time dilation occurs because of the relative motion between two objects. According to Einstein's theory of special relativity, time appears to slow down for an object that is moving at high speeds compared to an observer at rest. This effect becomes more pronounced as the speed of the object approaches the speed of light.

3. Is the Twin Paradox a real phenomenon?

While the Twin Paradox is a thought experiment, it has been observed in experiments with atomic clocks and in space travel. The effects of time dilation have been confirmed by numerous experiments and are an essential part of our understanding of the universe.

4. Can the Twin Paradox be resolved?

The Twin Paradox can be resolved by taking into account the concept of "proper time." This is the time measured by an observer who is at rest with respect to the object in question. In the Twin Paradox, the traveling twin experiences more proper time, therefore aging less than the stationary twin.

5. What are the implications of the Twin Paradox?

The Twin Paradox has significant implications for our understanding of time and space. It shows that time is not absolute and can be affected by the relative motion of objects. It also demonstrates the concept of time dilation and how it plays a role in our understanding of the universe.

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