Something fishy about special relativity?

In summary, the reason for the many paradoxes surrounding Special Relativity is due to an underlying issue with our understanding of absolute time and the relativity of simultaneity. This leads to fallacious assumptions about rigid objects and can cause confusion when trying to understand the concept of speed. However, these paradoxes can be easily resolved once the errors are identified.
  • #1
Neandethal00
201
4
The reason there are so many paradoxes is there is something fishy about Special Relativity (not General Rel) that no one can pin point it but many sense it.

Mathematically SR can NOT be proven wrong.
Experimentally SR can NOT be proven wrong.

IMHO, the reason may lie in our very basic definition of speed. Speed = Length/Time.
Interestingly, speed affect both Length and Time (mass comes later).

We may be going in cycles here, speed-->length-->time-->speed...
It doesn't matter how you introduce one variable others will produce predicted results.
 
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  • #2


Neandethal00 said:
... there is something fishy about Special Relativity ...

Uh ... good luck with that thought.

Mathematically SR can NOT be proven wrong.
Experimentally SR can NOT be proven wrong.

Yep. Kind of hard to see how it can be wrong in any sense when, as you just stated, it can't be wrong in any sense.
 
  • #3
Neandethal00 said:
… there is something fishy about Special Relativity …

what's wrong with being fishy? :mad:
 
  • #4


Neandethal00 said:
The reason there are so many paradoxes is there is something fishy about Special Relativity (not General Rel) that no one can pin point it but many sense it.

Mathematically SR can NOT be proven wrong.
Experimentally SR can NOT be proven wrong.

IMHO, the reason may lie in our very basic definition of speed. Speed = Length/Time.
Interestingly, speed affect both Length and Time (mass comes later).

We may be going in cycles here, speed-->length-->time-->speed...
It doesn't matter how you introduce one variable others will produce predicted results.

Oh, for the most part it's pretty easy to see where people go wrong in trying to understand SR. It's when they hold on to notions of absolute time.

One identifying characteristic of absolute time is this - if two objects take different paths through space-time, you expect their clocks to agree at the end.

Absolute time would be a logical consequence of everyone sharing the same concept of "now". Using this universal concept of "now", one could map any instant of time that one experienced to "absolute time", either on some central, "absolute clock", or a network of absolute clocks all synchronized by the "absoute now".

Relativity doesn't have either a universal "now" or a concept of absolute time, however.

While the notion of non-absolute time appears to be the root of the problem, a lot of people with this fundamental issue seem to misidentify the problem, and start building up elaborate mental defense systems to attempt to rationalize away the problems. These defense mechanisms can become more of an obstacle than the original problem, and are highly varied and somewhat unique to the individual. I was tempted to go into details, but it's probably best if I don't.
 
  • #5


Neandethal00 said:
The reason there are so many paradoxes is there is something fishy about Special Relativity (not General Rel) that no one can pin point it but many sense it.

The overwhelming majority of these paradoxes fall in one or more of three categories:
1) A paradoxical and internally inconsistent conclusion results from fallaciously assuming perfectly rigid objects; bug-rivet is an example.
2) A paradoxical and internally inconsistent conclusion results from fallaciously assuming absolute time and ignoring the relativity of simultaneity. The tipoff for these is usually words like "at the same time" or "the same rate" appearing.
3) As with the so-called twin paradox, there's no paradox, just a surprising result.

I don't see how any of these suggest any underlying fishiness in SR, any more than the following derivation:
x = 1
x2 = 1
x2 - 1 = 0
(x+1)(x-1) = 0
x+1 = 0
2 = 0
suggests that there's something fishy about algebra.
I just slipped in a division by zero at the next-to-last step, and the "paradox" disappears as soon as you notice it. That's the moral equivalent of slipping "at the same time" into a relativity thought experiment; the paradox lasts only as long as you don't notice the error.
 
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  • #6


Nugatory said:
I don't see how any of these suggest any underlying fishiness in SR, any more than the following derivation:
x = 1
x2 = 1
x2 - 1 = 0
(x+1)(x-1) = 0
x+1 = 0
2 = 0
suggests that there's something fishy about algebra.
I just slipped in a division by zero at the next-to-last step, and the "paradox" disappears as soon as you notice it. That's the moral equivalent of slipping "at the same time" into a relativity thought experiment; the paradox lasts only as long as you don't notice the error.
If you're saying that since x = 1 then (x-1) = 0, and you "divide by zero" but then you get:

(x+1) = 0/0 which is indeterminate, meaning it can take on any value, including 2.

This only works for people who think that 0/0 can only be 0 instead of any value.
 
  • #7


Nugatory said:
The overwhelming majority of these paradoxes fall in one or more of three categories:
1) A paradoxical and internally inconsistent conclusion results from fallaciously assuming perfectly rigid objects; bug-rivet is an example.
2) A paradoxical and internally inconsistent conclusion results from fallaciously assuming absolute time and ignoring the relativity of simultaneity. The tipoff for these is usually words like "at the same time" or "the same rate" appearing.
3) As with the so-called twin paradox, there's no paradox, just a surprising result.

My list was shorter, but offhand I'd say that the real issue in believing in a rigid object is the relativity of simultaneity. A rigid object requires a notion of simultaneity for the object to be "rigid" in. I.e. if you want to say an object is rigid because the front moves at the same time as you push the back, you need a definition of "at the same time".

It's not paradoxical to have Born rigid motion in SR (though it does require pre-planning to make an object move in a Born rigid manner). I'd say that the paradoxes come about when one believes that all rigid object's share a universal notion of simultaneity.
 
  • #8


ghwellsjr said:
If you're saying that since x = 1 then (x-1) = 0, and you "divide by zero" but then you get:

(x+1) = 0/0 which is indeterminate, meaning it can take on any value, including 2.

This only works for people who think that 0/0 can only be 0 instead of any value.
... or for people who didn't notice that the divisor was zero and reflexively evaluated 0/(x-1) to zero, as would be correct if x-1 were known to be non-zero.

... and special relativity paradoxes only work for people who think that there is an absolute time (or absolutely rigid bodies, or...). The point I'm trying to make is that the existence of SR paradoxes no more indicates "fishiness" in SR than the existence of bogus derivations such as the above indicates a problem with elementary algebra. On the contrary, they're opportunities to learn by finding the hidden error.
 
  • #9


Nugatory said:
... or for people who didn't notice that the divisor was zero and reflexively evaluated 0/(x-1) to zero, as would be correct if x-1 were known to be non-zero.

... and special relativity paradoxes only work for people who think that there is an absolute time (or absolutely rigid bodies, or...). The point I'm trying to make is that the existence of SR paradoxes no more indicates "fishiness" in SR than the existence of bogus derivations such as the above indicates a problem with elementary algebra. On the contrary, they're opportunities to learn by finding the hidden error.
I see now what you are saying but it would have been a lot more effective for me if you had included the step:

(x+1) = 0/(x-1)

I was assuming that you were dividing the two equations:

(x+1)(x-1)/(x-1) = 0/0
 
  • #10


pervect said:
My list was shorter, but offhand I'd say that the real issue in believing in a rigid object is the relativity of simultaneity. A rigid object requires a notion of simultaneity for the object to be "rigid" in. I.e. if you want to say an object is rigid because the front moves at the same time as you push the back, you need a definition of "at the same time".

It's not paradoxical to have Born rigid motion in SR (though it does require pre-planning to make an object move in a Born rigid manner). I'd say that the paradoxes come about when one believes that all rigid object's share a universal notion of simultaneity.

I'm inclined to agree with you - I debated including that one in my list, decided to do so because so many beginners see the rigidity problems as a way to get around RoS, not a consequence of it.

Too often I've seen someone work through all the trains and mirrors and lightning bolts... finally hit their eureka moment and say they've gotten it... and then come back next day with a story that starts "I have this rigid rod, and one end of it is touching a detonator, and I push on the other end...".
 
  • #11


ghwellsjr said:
I see now what you are saying but it would have been a lot more effective for me if you had included the step:

(x+1) = 0/(x-1)

I was assuming that you were dividing the two equations:

(x+1)(x-1)/(x-1) = 0/0

Ah - right. I never was a very good stage magician, just never did get effective misdirection figured out :-)
 
  • #12


pervect said:
Oh, for the most part it's pretty easy to see where people go wrong in trying to understand SR. It's when they hold on to notions of absolute time.

While the notion of non-absolute time appears to be the root of the problem, a lot of people with this fundamental issue seem to misidentify the problem, and start building up elaborate mental defense systems to attempt to rationalize away the problems. These defense mechanisms can become more of an obstacle than the original problem, and are highly varied and somewhat unique to the individual. I was tempted to go into details, but it's probably best if I don't.

When I read about paradoxes and their rebuttals, neither convince me much. Not that convincing me matters. IMHO both party suffer from forced rationalization.

I'm surprised they have gone to such an extend as flying a plane around the globe for days to prove Time Dilation, when they can now use the space station. The station is moving at 4.78 miles/sec. A simultaneous experiment on Earth and on the station counting GHz pulses for days can clearly prove time dilation.
Better yet, by measuring and accumulating long Time Constants of two identical RC circuits can prove not only time dilation but also effects of time dilation on electronic circuits.
 
  • #13


Neandethal00 said:
A simultaneous experiment on Earth and on the station counting GHz pulses for days can clearly prove time dilation.

We've been doing that for years already. The clocks on GPS satellites run at a different rate from earthbound clocks (in their own rest frames), to compensate for relativistic effects. This includes both the speed-dependent ("SR") effect and the altitude-dependent ("GR") effect.

To test this, when the first GPS satellite (or one of the early ones, at least) went into orbit, the correction was initially disabled. The satellite clock ran at the rate predicted by relativity. Then the correction was turned on for "production" purposes.

http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/lrr-2003-1/

(see the paragraph on page 16, "There is an interesting story about this frequency offset...")
 
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  • #14


Neandethal00 said:
When I read about paradoxes and their rebuttals, neither convince me much. Not that convincing me matters. IMHO both party suffer from forced rationalization.

I'm surprised they have gone to such an extend as flying a plane around the globe for days to prove Time Dilation, when they can now use the space station. The station is moving at 4.78 miles/sec. A simultaneous experiment on Earth and on the station counting GHz pulses for days can clearly prove time dilation.
Better yet, by measuring and accumulating long Time Constants of two identical RC circuits can prove not only time dilation but also effects of time dilation on electronic circuits.

This is utterly silly. Not only are things like this routinely done via the GPS (as stated already), but why would an RC circuit be ANY better or more accurate than all the other experiments, such as this one?

http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2010/sep/24/relativity-with-a-human-touch

And it self-defeating to talk about "A simultaneous experiment" without having a clue on what that means and how to determine that something is occurring "simultaneously", something that needs careful attention when dealing with relativistic effects.

I think you are the one suffering from "forced rationalization", or maybe "false rationalization".

Zz.
 
  • #16
Neandethal00 said:
The reason there are so many paradoxes is there is something fishy about Special Relativity (not General Rel) that no one can pin point it but many sense it.

[No] thanks for hijacking the thread that this (and the following responses) were originally posted to. Please note the sticky post at the top of this forum:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=17355
 

1. What is special relativity?

Special relativity is a theory developed by Albert Einstein in 1905 that explains the relationship between space and time. It states that the laws of physics are the same for all observers in uniform motion, regardless of their relative velocity. This theory also includes the famous equation E=mc^2, which relates mass and energy.

2. How does special relativity affect our understanding of time?

Special relativity introduces the concept of time dilation, which means that time is not absolute and can pass at different rates depending on one's relative speed and gravitational field. This means that time can appear to pass slower for objects moving at high speeds or in strong gravitational fields, compared to stationary objects.

3. Can special relativity explain the phenomenon of length contraction?

Yes, special relativity also predicts length contraction, which means that objects in motion appear to be shorter in the direction of their motion when observed by a stationary observer. This is a result of the relativity of simultaneity, where events that are simultaneous for one observer may not be simultaneous for another.

4. Is special relativity only applicable to objects moving at high speeds?

No, special relativity applies to all objects in motion, regardless of their speed. However, its effects become more significant as the speed of an object approaches the speed of light. At everyday speeds, the effects of special relativity are negligible and can be ignored.

5. How is special relativity related to general relativity?

Special relativity is a special case of general relativity, which is a more comprehensive theory of gravity developed by Einstein in 1915. General relativity includes the effects of acceleration and non-uniform gravitational fields, while special relativity only considers uniform motion and uniform gravitational fields. General relativity is also a more accurate and comprehensive theory, but special relativity is still widely used and applicable in many situations.

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