If light appears frozen due to time dilation, how do its fields fluctuate?

In summary, the concept of a frame of reference moving at the speed of light is not compatible with the principles of relativity and is therefore not a valid concept. Additionally, for a particle traveling at the speed of light, the path length (proper time) is zero, but in the reference frame of any observer, the elapsed coordinate time and distance are not zero. This means that the particle does move and does age, but our intuition is not equipped to perceive this properly.
  • #1
d3mm
140
1
I guess I have no problem with time dilation for stuff moving at less than c, but the step from less than to to c, is confusing me.
 
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  • #2
Then don't take the step. It's impossible.
 
  • #3
Is it true that for a particle (like a photon) traveling at c, that Lorentz contraction makes its path length =Zero (i.e. it doesn't move)

And also that time dilation means that it does not age.

Therefore we end up with something that doesn't move and doesn't age??

Does it even exist?

?! Help! Brain melting
 
  • #4
FAQ: What does the world look like in a frame of reference moving at the speed of light?

This question has a long and honorable history. As a young student, Einstein tried to imagine what an electromagnetic wave would look like from the point of view of a motorcyclist riding alongside it. But we now know, thanks to Einstein himself, that it really doesn't make sense to talk about such observers.

The most straightforward argument is based on the positivist idea that concepts only mean something if you can define how to measure them operationally. If we accept this philosophical stance (which is by no means compatible with every concept we ever discuss in physics), then we need to be able to physically realize this frame in terms of an observer and measuring devices. But we can't. It would take an infinite amount of energy to accelerate Einstein and his motorcycle to the speed of light.

Since arguments from positivism can often kill off perfectly interesting and reasonable concepts, we might ask whether there are other reasons not to allow such frames. There are. One of the most basic geometrical ideas is intersection. In relativity, we expect that even if different observers disagree about many things, they agree about intersections of world-lines. Either the particles collided or they didn't. The arrow either hit the bull's-eye or it didn't. So although general relativity is far more permissive than Newtonian mechanics about changes of coordinates, there is a restriction that they should be smooth, one-to-one functions. If there was something like a Lorentz transformation for v=c, it wouldn't be one-to-one, so it wouldn't be mathematically compatible with the structure of relativity. (An easy way to see that it can't be one-to-one is that the length contraction would reduce a finite distance to a point.)

What if a system of interacting, massless particles was conscious, and could make observations? The argument given in the preceding paragraph proves that this isn't possible, but let's be more explicit. There are two possibilities. The velocity V of the system's center of mass either moves at c, or it doesn't. If V=c, then all the particles are moving along parallel lines, and therefore they aren't interacting, can't perform computations, and can't be conscious. (This is also consistent with the fact that the proper time s of a particle moving at c is constant, ds=0.) If V is less than c, then the observer's frame of reference isn't moving at c. Either way, we don't get an observer moving at c.
 
  • #5
Is it true that for a particle (like a photon) traveling at c, that Lorentz contraction makes its path length =Zero (i.e. it doesn't move) And also that time dilation means that it does not age.
Along the path of a light ray, the path length (proper time) is zero. But the elapsed coordinate time and distance in the reference frame of any observer is not zero. So to say the light ray doesn't move and doesn't age is not the case.
 
  • #6
Thinking about this and the replies, especially the excellent one from bcrowell, leads me to the conclusion that I am thinking of time in intuitive but unrealistic way, hence am suffering from an apparent paradox. Or in other words, I should just accept that I don't have the sensory equipment to perceive the result properly.

Would that agree with the consensus?
 
  • #7
d3mm said:
Thinking about this and the replies, especially the excellent one from bcrowell, leads me to the conclusion that I am thinking of time in intuitive but unrealistic way, hence am suffering from an apparent paradox. Or in other words, I should just accept that I don't have the sensory equipment to perceive the result properly.

Would that agree with the consensus?

Yes. You will find that in cosmology, and even more so in quantum mechanics, the things being studied are simply not ones that are part of our everyday lives and thus our built up "intuition" just isn't useful. It would SEEM that time IS in our everyday experience, but when relativistic speeds come in, it is not.
 
  • #8
There is no time or distance relative to a photon. That doesn't mean time and distance are zero, it means they are undefined or meaningless. We have a related FAQ: Rest frame of a photon
 

1. How does time dilation affect the appearance of light?

Time dilation does not directly affect the appearance of light. It is a phenomenon that occurs when an object moves at a high velocity, causing time to pass more slowly for that object. This can make it seem like light is frozen in time, but in reality, it is still traveling at its constant speed of approximately 299,792,458 meters per second.

2. What are the fields of light and how do they fluctuate?

The fields of light refer to the electric and magnetic fields that make up an electromagnetic wave. These fields are constantly fluctuating as the wave travels through space, oscillating in a perpendicular direction to each other and to the direction of the wave's propagation.

3. Is light actually frozen or is it just an illusion caused by time dilation?

Light is not actually frozen, it only appears that way due to the effects of time dilation. As mentioned before, light is always traveling at a constant speed, but when observed from a different frame of reference, its apparent speed may appear to change due to time dilation.

4. How does time dilation affect the frequency and wavelength of light?

Time dilation does not directly affect the frequency or wavelength of light. These properties of light remain constant, regardless of the observer's frame of reference. However, due to the effects of time dilation, an observer in a different reference frame may perceive a change in the frequency and wavelength of light.

5. Can we observe the effects of time dilation on light in everyday life?

The effects of time dilation on light are not noticeable in everyday life because they only occur at extremely high velocities. For example, a spaceship traveling at close to the speed of light may experience time dilation, but for an observer on Earth, this would not be noticeable. However, these effects can be observed and measured in experiments using high-speed particles or in astronomical observations of objects moving at extreme speeds.

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