Change of frames in relativity

In summary, an observer who accelerates will need to use a different coordinate system to locate events in the past-present-future.
  • #1
johnny_bohnny
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Hi guys, this is my first post, I'm a newbie regarding physics and relativity so I hope you can help me here.

I've just recently started learning about relativity, and my question will be about the relative simultaneity, or precisely Andromeda paradox.

So in the original setup, if an observer is at rest with respect to Andromeda, he will consider some event, let's call it X, as his present. If another observer moves away from Andromeda, he will consider an earlier event of Andromeda's history, let's call it Y as his present. That's at least what should be the setup.

But if two observers are at rest mutually and of course with respect to Andromeda, and one starts moving away from it, accelerating to get in the position that I've previously mentioned, how will he be able to get from the moment that they both agree about to consider their present (since they are mutually at rest) to a moment when he considers his present to be 'earlier' than the present of the stationary observer. Basically, what happens during acceleration or the change of frames, so that one observer can get from one position of simultaneity defining to another?

Thanks in advance. Johnny
 
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  • #2
Is there a question here? Seems like you do understand the paradox but are uncomfortable with is implications to the meaning of present, past and future. When you accelerate and changes frames, you are using different coordinates to locate events in the past-prensent-future. An example might help. Imagine you come to an intersection and that there is a building ahead on the left side of the street. Than you take a left turn (change of frames) and the building is now on the right side of the street. The building didn't move, but you see if from a different perspective. Same thing is true about the Andromeda paradox. Nothing changes to Andromeda but you see it from a different perspective and an event that seemed to be in the future, now is in the past (or vice-verse, depending on how you accelerate).
 
  • #3
dauto said:
Is there a question here? Seems like you do understand the paradox but are uncomfortable with is implications to the meaning of present, past and future. When you accelerate and changes frames, you are using different coordinates to locate events in the past-prensent-future. An example might help. Imagine you come to an intersection and that there is a building ahead on the left side of the street. Than you take a left turn (change of frames) and the building is now on the right side of the street. The building didn't move, but you see if from a different perspective. Same thing is true about the Andromeda paradox. Nothing changes to Andromeda but you see it from a different perspective and an event that seemed to be in the future, now is in the past (or vice-verse, depending on how you accelerate).

Hey there, I understand what you mean, but can you answer me more concretely regarding the scenario I mentioned, when two observers agree about simultaneity and then one accelerates and they disagree. It will make it much easier, but your answer is helpful, nonetheless. :)
 
  • #4
johnny_bohnny said:
Hi guys, this is my first post, I'm a newbie regarding physics and relativity so I hope you can help me here.

I've just recently started learning about relativity, and my question will be about the relative simultaneity, or precisely Andromeda paradox.

So in the original setup, if an observer is at rest with respect to Andromeda, he will consider some event, let's call it X, as his present. If another observer moves away from Andromeda, he will consider an earlier event of Andromeda's history, let's call it Y as his present. That's at least what should be the setup.

But if two observers are at rest mutually and of course with respect to Andromeda, and one starts moving away from it, accelerating to get in the position that I've previously mentioned, how will he be able to get from the moment that they both agree about to consider their present (since they are mutually at rest) to a moment when he considers his present to be 'earlier' than the present of the stationary observer. Basically, what happens during acceleration or the change of frames, so that one observer can get from one position of simultaneity defining to another?

Thanks in advance. Johnny
It may help to understand that frames aren't something that are "naturally attached" to a given observer, any observer is free to use any coordinate system they wish (with any definition of simultaneity they wish) to assign position and time coordinates to events. It is a matter of convention that purely inertial observers should consider "their own frame" to be the inertial frame in which they happen to be at rest, but there isn't really any standard convention for the coordinate system of observers who accelerate. You can if you wish design a non-inertial coordinate system for an observer who accelerates that has the property that its definition of simultaneity at every point on their worldline agrees with the definition of simultaneity in the inertial frame where they are instantaneously at rest at that point, and in this case the simultaneity surface will rapidly "swing forward" during the accelerated phase of the Andromeda example, but this is purely a matter of choice, nothing in physics forces a given observer to use any particular coordinate system.
 
  • #5
johnny_bohnny said:
Hi guys, this is my first post, I'm a newbie regarding physics and relativity so I hope you can help me here.
Welcome to PF. We're glad to help.

johnny_bohnny said:
I've just recently started learning about relativity, and my question will be about the relative simultaneity, or precisely Andromeda paradox.
I'm going to draw some spacetime diagrams for you using the Lorentz Transformation process to get from one to the other. In my diagrams, I will assume that the observer at rest with Andromeda is on the Earth and show him as the thick blue line, Andromeda as the thick red line 2.5 million miles away and the observer moving away from Andromeda at 0.4c in a rocket shown as the thick black line. Dots on each of the thick lines represent 1 million year increments of time. I show your event X as a red star exploding at Andromeda and your event Y as a yellow star exploding 1 million years earlier according to Andromeda time. The thin lines represent signals traveling at the speed of light between an observer and Andromeda. I will be showing both how a spacetime diagram depicts simultaneity and how each observer can measure it using radar techniques. In both cases, the key to understanding is Einstein's second postulate, that it takes the same amount of time for a signal to get from an observer to a target as it takes for the signal to get from the target back to the observer, and his first postulate that each observer uses his own clock to measure time and that each observer will measure the round-trip speed of light to be the same value (called c).

johnny_bohnny said:
So in the original setup, if an observer is at rest with respect to Andromeda, he will consider some event, let's call it X, as his present.
Here's the mutual Earth/Andromeda rest frame showing how the red star exploding at time 0 is simultaneous with the Earth clock being at 0. The yellow star exploded at -1 million years at both Andromeda and at Earth in this Inertial Reference Frame (IRF). You can see the black rocket observer's worldline but we are not yet concerned about his observations or measurements:

attachment.php?attachmentid=66471&stc=1&d=1392061624.png

To see how the Earth observer uses radar to measure the times, consider the signals that he sent earlier and received later. He has been sending signals continually millions of years earlier but I'm only showing the ones that are significant for our purposes. The one that he sent at his time of -3.5 My (million years) hits the yellow star when it explodes and the return echo arrives at the Earth observer at his time of 1.5 My so he takes the average of those two numbers and gets -1 My as his measurement of the time when the yellow star exploded, the same as his rest frame depicts it. Similarly, he can measure the time of the red star exploding as 0 My according to his clock.

johnny_bohnny said:
If another observer moves away from Andromeda, he will consider an earlier event of Andromeda's history, let's call it Y as his present. That's at least what should be the setup.
Here's the rest frame of the black rocket observer. Except for the signals, this diagram was derived by taking the coordinates from the first diagram and Lorentz Transforming them at a speed of 0.4c. Note that the event of the yellow star exploding is simultaneous with his time of zero and the red star explodes at his time of about 1.05 million years (My):

attachment.php?attachmentid=66472&stc=1&d=1392061624.png

Now we can see how he also can make these measurements. He also has been sending out radar signals continually but again, I'm only showing the ones that hit the exploding stars. The one that he sent at his time of -2.25 My hit the exploding yellow star and echoed back to him at his time +2.25 My and the average is 0 My. The radar signal that he sent at -1.6 My gets averaged with the one he received at +3.7 My for a measurement of 1.05 My.

Do you see how this works?

The observers can also measure the distance to the events by taking the difference between the received and sent times, in other words, the interval of time between sending and receiving the radar signals and dividing by two and calculating how far light travels in that amount of time.

Let's see how that works for the black rocket observer. For the yellow star, half of 4.5 My is 2.25 My which corresponds to 2.25 Mly distance, exactly as the diagram depicts. For the red star, half of 5.3 My yields 2.65 Mly distance.

johnny_bohnny said:
But if two observers are at rest mutually and of course with respect to Andromeda, and one starts moving away from it, accelerating to get in the position that I've previously mentioned, how will he be able to get from the moment that they both agree about to consider their present (since they are mutually at rest) to a moment when he considers his present to be 'earlier' than the present of the stationary observer. Basically, what happens during acceleration or the change of frames, so that one observer can get from one position of simultaneity defining to another?
For this situation, let's consider the Earth observer to hop on the rocket just as it is passing by Earth at time zero (for everybody, since it is the origin of all the IRF's). Here is a diagram similar to the first one but showing the radar signals starting prior to time zero with the blue Earth observer and ending with the echoes returning to the black rocket observer after time zero:

attachment.php?attachmentid=66473&stc=1&d=1392061624.png

For the yellow star, the observer sent the radar signal at -3.5 My and received the echo at 2.3 My and calculates a time of -0.6 My at a distance of 2.9 Mly. For the red star, he sent the signal at -2.5 My and got the echo at 3.8 My for a time of 0.65 My at a distance of 3.15 Mly.

But note that these measurements are not depicted on the diagram because it is inertial and the observer is not.

Now I want to show you that he gets the same thing if we look at it from the rest IRF of the rocket:

attachment.php?attachmentid=66474&stc=1&d=1392061624.png

Again, this diagram does not depict the observer's measurements for the same reason as before (he is not inertial and the diagram is).

Next I want to show you how he can construct a non-inertial rest frame by making radar measurements throughout his entire trip. We have to show this starting earlier and ending later and I'm going to show it in another IRF in which the observer's speed is the same both before and after he transfers from the Earth to the rocket. His speed is 0.208712c, first towards Andromeda and then away:

attachment.php?attachmentid=66475&stc=1&d=1392061624.jpg

The observer keeps track of all the sent and received times and does the calculations as before and then constructs this non-inertial diagram:

attachment.php?attachmentid=66476&stc=1&d=1392061624.png

Note that the times and distances that he calculated for the two stars are now depicted accurately. In fact, if you want, you can copy this diagram and drawn in all the same radar signals that were in the previous diagram to validate the process.

johnny_bohnny said:
Thanks in advance. Johnny
You're welcome. I only hope that you still feel like thanking me.
 

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  • #6
johnny_bohnny said:
Hey there, I understand what you mean, but can you answer me more concretely regarding the scenario I mentioned, when two observers agree about simultaneity and then one accelerates and they disagree. It will make it much easier, but your answer is helpful, nonetheless. :)
I just want to second what JesseM said. Reference frames are not an inherent part of physics (they are part of the analysis), any observer is free to use any frame that they like. So if they disagree it is only because they have chosen to disagree. The details depend on that choice. ghwellsjr described some of the acceptable ways of disagreeing.
 
  • #7
DaleSpam said:
I just want to second what JesseM said. Reference frames are not an inherent part of physics (they are part of the analysis), any observer is free to use any frame that they like. So if they disagree it is only because they have chosen to disagree. The details depend on that choice. ghwellsjr described some of the acceptable ways of disagreeing.
And if they agree it is only because they have chosen to agree as I pointed out in another recent Andromeda thread:

ghwellsjr said:
Only if they agree to agree, that is, if they have previously agreed on a coordinate system and if they have synchronized their clocks. It doesn't happen automatically.
 
  • #8
ghwellsjr said:
And if they agree it is only because they have chosen to agree as I pointed out in another recent Andromeda thread:
I have chosen to agree :smile:
 
  • #9
johnny_bohnny said:
[...]
Basically, what happens during acceleration or the change of frames, so that one observer can get from one position of simultaneity defining to another?

Brian Greene gave a similar example in his Nova TV series on the "Fabric of the Cosmos" (and also on his book of the same title). I thought his explanation was very good.
 
  • #10
Ghwellsjr, I looked through your diagrams and I apologize, but they seem very complicated to me at this point. I don't really understand them and the relation to my question. Maybe you or somebody else can explan this if I give more details to my questions. Or if I specify the example.

So we have two observers on Earth mutually at rest and at rest wrt Andromeda. Their clocks are in sync so they agree on simultaneity.

One of them starts to move away from Andromeda, and from the other observer that stays in the same inertial frame. He accelerates and the starts to move away inertially, and therefore he should consider the present of Andromeda the past of what the stationary observer considers to be present. So my question is how? If we consider the time to flow 'normally' in the reference frame of the stationary observer, and by that I mean that the clock on Andromeda ticks at the same rate as his, how is it possible that the 'moving-away' observer saves a day of time, or more, during the short acceleration period? How do the two simultaneity 'surfaces' compare?
 
  • #11
johnny_bohnny said:
If we consider the time to flow 'normally' in the reference frame of the stationary observer, and by that I mean that the clock on Andromeda ticks at the same rate as his, how is it possible that the 'moving-away' observer saves a day of time, or more, during the short acceleration period? How do the two simultaneity 'surfaces' compare?

Why don't you draw them for yourself? If you draw your own, perhaps GH's will make more sense to you when you compare them to yours.

Hints:

Let the stationary observers coordinates be t,x,y,z. Let the moving observer's coordinates be t', x', y', z'

Let the motion of the moving observer be in the x direction according to the stationary observer

Then y' = y, and z' = z, so you don't need to draw them, meaning you can draw the simultaneity surfaces on a 2 d diagram of x and t.

Set c=1 for simplicity, by choosing units of years and light years

Surfaces of simultaneity will be t=constant for the stationary obserer and t'=constant for the moving observer

Use the Lorentz transform to transform between (t,x,y,z) and (t', x', y', z')
 
  • #12
johnny_bohnny said:
Ghwellsjr, I looked through your diagrams and I apologize, but they seem very complicated to me at this point. I don't really understand them and the relation to my question. Maybe you or somebody else can explan this if I give more details to my questions. Or if I specify the example.
Maybe my diagrams are too complicated or maybe they don't have enough appropriate detail or explanation.

I'll redraw my first two diagrams with an attempt to remedy these problems. Here is the first one showing the observer on Earth in blue and the observer on Andromeda in red 2.5 million miles away with two events labeled X and Y:

attachment.php?attachmentid=67618&stc=1&d=1394811434.png

I have labeled the dots that represent one-million year increments of time for both observers with the times on their previously synchronized clocks and aligned them with the Coordinate Time of the diagram. They both consider the explosion of the red star, event X, to be in their present because it is at their synchronized time of 0 years. The correct way of saying this is that the events of their clocks being at 0 years and event X have the same Coordinate Time of 0 years. They both consider the explosion of the yellow star, event Y, to be in their past because it is at their synchronized time of -1 million years. The correct way of saying this is that the events of their clocks being at -1 million years and event Y have the same Coordinate Time of -1 million years. I hope I have made this simple enough to clear up any confusion. Does it make perfect sense to you?

Now you originally stated that there was another observer moving away from Andromeda. So here is a diagram showing just that observer in black and the observer on Andromeda in red along with the same two events of the stars exploding:

attachment.php?attachmentid=67619&stc=1&d=1394811434.png

Since the black observer is moving, he can't synchronize his clock to the Andromeda clock because his own clock is Time Dilated in this diagram meaning that the dots marking the one-million intervals of time are stretched further apart than the Coordinate Time. However, I have set the time on the black clock so that it is at 0 years when the Coordinate Time is 0 years. That means that in this diagram, it is event X that is simultaneous with the moving observer's present. The correct way of saying this is that the event of the moving observer's clock being at 0 years and event X have the same Coordinate Time of 0 years.

Does this diagram and explanation make perfect sense to you? Any questions?

Now to see how the black observer establishes simultaneity according to his own rest frame, we have to use the Lorentz Transformation process to get from the coordinates of the previous diagram to this diagram:

attachment.php?attachmentid=67620&stc=1&d=1394811434.png

Do you understand how the Lorentz Transformation process works? If not, then, of course this diagram won't make any sense to you.

But assuming that the Lorentz Transformation is not a problem, then we can see how in the black observer's rest frame, it is event Y that is simultaneous with his time of 0 years or in his present. The correct way of saying this is that the event of the black observer's clock being at 0 years and event Y have the same Coordinate Time of 0 years.

So before we can go on, I need to know if everything so far is perfectly understandable to you? Please post any points of confusion.
 

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  • #13
@Ghwellsjr, thank you very much for the diagrams, I've understood them quite well, I think. The only problem with this is that they don't quite follow the scenario I was talking about. In the scenario that I'm seeking the answer for, the blue observer in some kind of way becomes the black observer.

I'll again describe it. We have two observers on Earth which are at rest wrt Andromeda and they agree on simultaneity. Suddenly, one starts accelerating to move away from Andromeda and this should shift his simultaneity hyperplane in some kind of way so that after he finishes acceleration and starts to move inertially, his 'now' of the Andromeda should be the event of Andromeda which happens before the event that the stationary observer considers to be present. So how does this happen? If the observer didn't start to accelerate he would keep on agreeing with the second one about what's happening on Andromeda. The one that didn't accelerate continues to have his definition of simultaneity, while the first one changes frames, and what does he get as a result?
 
  • #14
johnny_bohnny said:
Suddenly, one starts accelerating to move away from Andromeda and this should shift his simultaneity hyperplane in some kind of way so that after he finishes acceleration and starts to move inertially, his 'now' of the Andromeda should be the event of Andromeda which happens before the event that the stationary observer considers to be present.
Not necessarily. There is no standard definition of simultaneity for a non-inertial observer's frame, like this one. So you have to define the convention you want to use for determining his coordinates.

johnny_bohnny said:
the first one changes frames, and what does he get as a result?
That depends on the convention he arbitrarily chooses to adopt. Here is a paper on the topic which outlines a convention that I personally like. Note, it is merely a convention, and not required by nature in any way.

http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0104077
 
  • #15
DaleSpam said:
Not necessarily. There is no standard definition of simultaneity for a non-inertial observer's frame, like this one. So you have to define the convention you want to use for determining his coordinates.

That depends on the convention he arbitrarily chooses to adopt. Here is a paper on the topic which outlines a convention that I personally like. Note, it is merely a convention, and not required by nature in any way.

http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0104077

Hey Dale,

I understand that there is no standard convention, but what's certain is that the observer comes from one meaning of simultaneity (before acceleration) to another (after acceleration). So he shifts his lines of simultaneity, while the lines of the other observer remain constant, right? For me, the biggest question is what both of them consider to be their present of Andromeda before, during, and after acceleration of the 'moving one'.
Btw thanks for the link, I'll certainly check it out. I hope it will help.
 
  • #16
@Dale, I've red the convention you gave me, I understand it but the part that confuses me is the fact that the lines of simultaneity during of the traveling twin described here are different than those in the 'textbook' example, which is the one that is most mentioned. Is this true or am I missin something? And if it is, why so?
 
  • #17
johnny_bohnny said:
I understand that there is no standard convention, but what's certain is that the observer comes from one meaning of simultaneity (before acceleration) to another (after acceleration).
Why is that certain? Do you understand that the laws of nature don't force any particular simultaneity definition on anyone, that any observer is free to use any simultaneity convention he pleases? Even for purely inertial observers, it is just a matter of human convention that physicists often describe the inertial frame where they are at rest as "their own" frame, it's not as if there would be anything physically "wrong" with an inertial observer adopting some different definition of simultaneity.
 
  • #18
So basically there is no paradox in assigning more than one time of happening (relativized to different inertial frames) to an event, or to assign the same event to different equivalence classes under simultaneity?
 
  • #19
johnny_bohnny said:
So basically there is no paradox in assigning more than one time of happening (relativized to different inertial frames) to an event, or to assign the same event to different equivalence classes under simultaneity?

Correct. Certain rules for the assignment have desirable properties, especially for inertial frames, but that's about all you can say.
 
  • #20
johnny_bohnny said:
So basically there is no paradox in assigning more than one time of happening (relativized to different inertial frames) to an event, or to assign the same event to different equivalence classes under simultaneity?
Not sure what you mean by "different equivalence classes under simultaneity"--under any specific definition of simultaneity there is of course a unique truth about which groups of events are simultaneous with each other according to that definition, but there's no paradox in the fact that you there are multiple equally valid definitions that define simultaneity differently. It's similar to how, if you have a 2D plane with a pair of dots on it, and you want to draw some Cartesian x-y axes into assign coordinates to each event, you have a choice of different angles that you can orient your axes, and depending on how you orient them you can get different answers to the question "do both dots have the same y-coordinate?"
 
  • #21
"It must be that it is possible that one observer, who happens to move differently at different times, can
assign the same event to different equivalence classes under simultaneity, again at different times."

I'm referring to the overlap of the lines of simultaneity of an observer who switches between two inertial frames. The situation seems absurd, but can it be considered a paradox?
 
  • #22
johnny_bohnny said:
"It must be that it is possible that one observer, who happens to move differently at different times, can
assign the same event to different equivalence classes under simultaneity, again at different times."

I'm referring to the overlap of the lines of simultaneity of an observer who switches between two inertial frames. The situation seems absurd, but can it be considered a paradox?
Coordinate systems with "overlap" (multiple coordinates assigned to the same event) aren't allowed in relativity, AFAIK. I guess you're thinking of something like this: when an observer's clock reads T1, in his instantaneous inertial rest frame F1 some distant event A may be simultaneous with the event of his clock reading T1, and then if he accelerates it may be true that when his clock reads a later time T2, in in his new instantaneous inertial rest frame F2 the same distant event A may be simultaneous with T2. But this is a comparison of two different frames, there is no single allowable coordinate system where A is simultaneous with both T1 and T2.
 
  • #23
JesseM said:
Coordinate systems with "overlap" (multiple coordinates assigned to the same event) aren't allowed in relativity, AFAIK

Or anywhere else, for that matter. It's part of the definition of what a coordinate system is.
 
  • #24
johnny_bohnny said:
I understand that there is no standard convention, but what's certain is that the observer comes from one meaning of simultaneity (before acceleration) to another (after acceleration).
There is nothing certain about it. Simultaneity is a matter of the coordinate system and coordinate systems are a matter of convention. What is certain is that before the acceleration he is at rest wrt one set of inertial observers and afterwards he is at rest wrt another set of inertial observers. Both sets of inertial observers have a standard convention about simultaneity, but there is nothing which says that he must adopt either convention (nor are the inertial observers required to use the standard convention if they choose not to).

johnny_bohnny said:
So he shifts his lines of simultaneity, while the lines of the other observer remain constant, right? For me, the biggest question is what both of them consider to be their present of Andromeda before, during, and after acceleration of the 'moving one'.
Here is a geometric analogy that may help you understand the issues. We will pretend that the surface of the Earth is flat.

At a certain point there is an intersection of two straight roads. One road is heading magnetic north and the other is heading celestial north.

Associated with each road is a standard coordinate system with distances perpendicular to the road being assigned the coordinate x or x' and distances along the road being assigned the coordinate t or t'. The city of Toledo has a positive t coordinate but a negative t' coordinate.

There is also a curved road which initially parallels the magnetic north road, then bends, and then parallels the celestial north road.

There simply is no standard coordinate system associated with the road. There is nothing preventing travelers on the curved road from simply using the magnetic north coordinates or from simply using the celestial north coordinates. At any point travelers on the curved road are free to switch coordinates to either system, or they can even switch back and forth as often as they like. They could also use any other coordinate system they choose, whether it is straight or curved and whether it is adapted to the road or not. It is completely arbitrary.
 
  • #25
johnny_bohnny said:
@Dale, I've red the convention you gave me, I understand it but the part that confuses me is the fact that the lines of simultaneity during of the traveling twin described here are different than those in the 'textbook' example, which is the one that is most mentioned. Is this true or am I missin something? And if it is, why so?
That is true. And the reason why is simply because the authors prefer this method to the "textbook" method. It is entirely a matter of personal preference, so they are free to choose this method.
 
  • #26
johnny_bohnny said:
So basically there is no paradox in assigning more than one time of happening (relativized to different inertial frames) to an event
There is no paradox in that. However, you do need to be careful. Any single coordinate system must be a one-to-one mapping between points in R4 and events in spacetime. So you cannot assign more than one time coordinate to a given event in a single coordinate chart, but different coordinate charts can assign different times to a given event.
 
  • #27
JesseM said:
Coordinate systems with "overlap" (multiple coordinates assigned to the same event) aren't allowed in relativity, AFAIK. I guess you're thinking of something like this: when an observer's clock reads T1, in his instantaneous inertial rest frame F1 some distant event A may be simultaneous with the event of his clock reading T1, and then if he accelerates it may be true that when his clock reads a later time T2, in in his new instantaneous inertial rest frame F2 the same distant event A may be simultaneous with T2. But this is a comparison of two different frames, there is no single allowable coordinate system where A is simultaneous with both T1 and T2.

Yes, I meant two different frames, one before acceleration and one after acceleration. That's what I wrote in my previous post. So overlap of simultaneity surfaces (I know it's a convention, it's easier to call them surfaces) is allowed?
 
  • #28
@Dale, thanks for all your posts, I won't quote you because of too much words and for better understanding.
What is the difference between this method and the textbook method, can they both be considered standard conventions for inertial observers?
 
  • #29
johnny_bohnny said:
@Dale, thanks for all your posts, I won't quote you because of too much words and for better understanding.
What is the difference between this method and the textbook method, can they both be considered standard conventions for inertial observers?

For inertial observers they are identical. A feature of inertial frames in SR is that all 'reasonable' simultaneity conventions agree. For non-inertial observers, radar simultaneity and simultaneity from an instantaneously comoving inertial frame agree (in the limit) near the observer, but disagree further away. Radar coordinates have the feature that as long as an observer extends his/her world line inertially into the past, and into the future, then no matter what pattern of motion there is in between, the coordinates cover all of spacetime without problem. Coordinates built out of momenarily comoving ineratial frames will not work globally because of the intersection of lines of simultaneity.
 
  • #30
The standard introductory convention is to only cover inertial frames and not cover accelerating ones, and to point out that there is only one isotropic clock synchronization (what Dale calls, with good reason, a reasonable clock synchronization) in inertial frames.

Furthermore it is pointed out that these inertial frame synchronizations are NOT equivalent, each inertial frame has its own internally self-consistent syncho scheme which is not equivalent to the synchronization scheme of other inertial frames.

I'm concerned that johnny may be confusing himself by trying to consider accelerating frames before fully understanding inertial frames, but I'm not sure if there's anything to be done about it.

My other quick observation is that johnny's rephrasing appears to be slightly different than what was said, which doesn't give me a lot of confidence that robust communication is happening here :-(.
 
  • #31
It seems that I'm getting opinions from you guys that aren't similar, there is no convention.
So I'll ask again, before and after acceleration, if we use the standard textbook 'lines of simultaneity' in those two different frames, there is no contradiction if the lines of simultaneity overlap between those two observers.

And regarding differences between radar coordinates and standard textbook lines, I still didn't understand what is the difference between those two conventions. I know we can use both of them, but how can they be identical if they have different lines of simultaneity? That makes no sense.
 
  • #32
johnny_bohnny said:
@Ghwellsjr, thank you very much for the diagrams, I've understood them quite well, I think. The only problem with this is that they don't quite follow the scenario I was talking about.
I gave you a full answer that does follow your scenario completely in post #5 but you said in post #10 that my diagrams were "very complicated" and that you "don't really understand them". So in my previous post, I was trying to break it down into smaller chunks that you could understand and now you say you do understand them as well as other aspects so now I would like you to take another look at post #5.

johnny_bohnny said:
In the scenario that I'm seeking the answer for, the blue observer in some kind of way becomes the black observer.
Yes, and that is what I showed you at the end of post #5. You also said (in post #16) that you understand the paper that DaleSpam linked to in post #14. If that is the case, then you should be able to understand post #5 because it uses the method described in that paper.

johnny_bohnny said:
I'll again describe it. We have two observers on Earth which are at rest wrt Andromeda and they agree on simultaneity. Suddenly, one starts accelerating to move away from Andromeda and this should shift his simultaneity hyperplane in some kind of way so that after he finishes acceleration and starts to move inertially, his 'now' of the Andromeda should be the event of Andromeda which happens before the event that the stationary observer considers to be present. So how does this happen? If the observer didn't start to accelerate he would keep on agreeing with the second one about what's happening on Andromeda. The one that didn't accelerate continues to have his definition of simultaneity, while the first one changes frames, and what does he get as a result?
This is the third time you have described your scenario. I understood it the first time. No need to keep repeating.

Please study post #5 and if at any point you don't understand, please explain your point of confusion. It is a direct answer to your questions. It shows how the observer who changes his inertial state can construct his own non-inertial rest frame in a seamless manner that has no discontinuities or overlapping events and uses exactly the same convention for the inertial regions as for the non-inertial region. In other words, he doesn't have to be aware of his own acceleration, he just continues to apply his same convention all along.

Please don't be concerned about the fact that this convention differs from the one in your textbook. After you understand this convention, you can describe for us the convention that your textbook is promoting and we'll be able to comment on it.
 
  • #33
johnny_bohnny said:
It seems that I'm getting opinions from you guys that aren't similar, there is no convention.
So I'll ask again, before and after acceleration, if we use the standard textbook 'lines of simultaneity' in those two different frames, there is no contradiction if the lines of simultaneity overlap between those two observers.

And regarding differences between radar coordinates and standard textbook lines, I still didn't understand what is the difference between those two conventions. I know we can use both of them, but how can they be identical if they have different lines of simultaneity? That makes no sense.
I doubt that there is any difference between those two conventions except in how the textbook applies it.

The blue inertial observer (Earth) uses the radar method to establish his coordinates:

attachment.php?attachmentid=67618&stc=1&d=1394811434.png

The black inertial observer (traveler) uses the same radar method to establish his coordinates:

attachment.php?attachmentid=67620&stc=1&d=1394811434.png

The blue-black non-inertial observer uses the exact same radar method to establish his coordinates:

attachment.php?attachmentid=67668&stc=1&d=1394899594.png

They all get different coordinates because they all have different rest states.

I'm going to guess that your textbook takes portions of the first two diagrams and combines them into a third diagram without actually showing how the blue-black observer would have done it.

EDIT: I have made a new diagram for the traveler showing the Proper Times for easier comparison with the other two diagrams. I also made the transitions between the two inertial states more realistic.
 

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  • #34
johnny_bohnny said:
What is the difference between this method and the textbook method, can they both be considered standard conventions for inertial observers?
The radar time method reduces to the standard convention for inertial observers and the Rindler convention (not "standard" but well known) for uniformly accelerating observers. Dolby and Gull mention this explicitly in the paper on pages 5 and 6.
 
  • #35
johnny_bohnny said:
It seems that I'm getting opinions from you guys that aren't similar, there is no convention.
This is troubling that you believe this. The replies you have received are very similar. What specifically do you think is a different opinion. It would help if you would quote rather than just make broad statements of a disagreement that I (for one) don't see.

johnny_bohnny said:
So I'll ask again, before and after acceleration, if we use the standard textbook 'lines of simultaneity' in those two different frames, there is no contradiction if the lines of simultaneity overlap between those two observers.
There is no contradiction because they are two different frames. Different coordinate charts are allowed to disagree. Did you not understand the geometric analogy I posted above?

johnny_bohnny said:
And regarding differences between radar coordinates and standard textbook lines, I still didn't understand what is the difference between those two conventions. I know we can use both of them, but how can they be identical if they have different lines of simultaneity? That makes no sense.
They are identical only for the special case of inertial observers. For non-inertial observers the standard convention does not even apply.
 

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