How does special relativity account for the time on a single moving clock?

In summary: because it's about things we can actually measure, and questions can actually be settled by pointing to experiment, rather than debated without end and without any resolution.
  • #71
DaleSpam said:
Then you cannot use x=0.5 ct to describe any of those clocks.

Dale- Thats my point. x in the LT does not describe the position of any of the moving clocks. The position of the moving clocks is given in the formulation of the problem. See section 3 of 1905 " to the origin of one of the systems let a constant velocity v be imparted...and ..communicated...to the clocks." No symbol is given to indicate the position of the moving clocks. In my view x in the LT is an independent variable, perhaps indicating the position of some event such as a light flash.
With this in mind, I am questioning the use in section 4 of the variable x to indicate the position of the single moving clock.
JM
 
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  • #72
JM said:
Dale- Thats my point. x in the LT does not describe the position of any of the moving clocks. The position of the moving clocks is given in the formulation of the problem. See section 3 of 1905 " to the origin of one of the systems let a constant velocity v be imparted...and ..communicated...to the clocks." No symbol is given to indicate the position of the moving clocks. In my view x in the LT is an independent variable, perhaps indicating the position of some event such as a light flash.
With this in mind, I am questioning the use in section 4 of the variable x to indicate the position of the single moving clock.
The variable x is simply a coordinate. There is nothing wrong with specifying that x=0.5 ct is the x-coordinate of some clock in a given frame. The only problem is that it contradicts your assertion that the clock is at rest in a frame moving at 0.8 c wrt the first. In that frame you would have x'=-0.5 ct' representing the coordinate of the clock. This represents a clock moving at -0.5 c, not at rest, and explains why you get equal time dilation.
 
  • #73
DaleSpam said:
In the 1905 model he analyzed a clock which goes in a circle. Such a clock goes in the +x and +y and -x and -y directions at some point and every combination inbetween. A restriction to clocks moving in the +x direction is not a part of the 1905 model, and indeed is incompatible with the Lorentz transform for boosts to arbitrary speeds.

Moving clocks are always slow. Your analysis above contradicts itself as I mentioned above.

Dale- When I refer to the 1905 model I mean that presented in section 3. Section 4, which you refer to, provides no theoretical basis for eg the use of x to indicate the position of one of the moving clocks, or the use of the LT, which refers to a single pair of frames, to a series of frames linked together and changing direction.
The purpose of this thread is to find out if anyone can provide the theory that supports the idea that moving clocks always run slow. So far I haven't seen it.
I hope you see from my added descriptions thay my analysis doesn't contradict.
JM
 
  • #74
ghwellsjr said:
In Einstein's nomenclature, you are asking if τ can be greater than t. Of course, there are many events in the first FoR with a t co-ordinate less than the τ co-ordinate in the second FoR. But in general that has nothing to do with a clock moving in a stationary frame. The only time you can use the Lorentz Transform to calculate the time on a clock moving in the stationary frame is when a clock at the origin of the second FoR moves at the same velocity that the second FoR is moving and this will be indicated by the spatial co-ordinates remaining zero in the second FoR while the time co-ordinate is changing.

George- First, all the clocks of the stationary frame are stationary, none move. All the clocks of the moving frame are at rest in that frame and move with the speed v. Thats all the clocks there are. So if you allow that τ can be greater than t then: all the moving clocks are synched so all read τ, including the one at the origin, which is the clock described above, and so the moving clock is not running slow.
Are you adding the condition that the x value chosen must result in the moving coordinate being 0? If so then under these conditions the moving clock 'always' runs slow.
But what about the other conditions where the moving clocks (including the one at the origin) are not slow? Suppose that I am the observer stationed at the moving origin to record the time on my clock. From the above it seems that I would record a range of values, some greater and some smaller than the stationary clocks,depending on the x values chosen by the stationary observer. How would I separate out the slow ones as being valid, and the fast ones as being not valid? Wouldn't I deny that my clock was always slow?
Jm
 
  • #75
PAllen said:
JM said:
I think you are confusing some concept here. Proper time as defined in the integral is not a coordinate at all. It gives time elapsed on a single clock following some spacetime path between two specific events. Two different frames may give different labels to all the events on the clocks path, but the computed proper time will come out the same (as will the time elapsed on an actual single clock between two physically defined events).
PAllen- Can you give a specific example in terms of Einsteins stationary and moving frames?
JM
 
  • #76
JM said:
ghwellsjr said:
In Einstein's nomenclature, you are asking if τ can be greater than t. Of course, there are many events in the first FoR with a t co-ordinate less than the τ co-ordinate in the second FoR. But in general that has nothing to do with a clock moving in a stationary frame. The only time you can use the Lorentz Transform to calculate the time on a clock moving in the stationary frame is when a clock at the origin of the second FoR moves at the same velocity that the second FoR is moving and this will be indicated by the spatial co-ordinates remaining zero in the second FoR while the time co-ordinate is changing.
George- First, all the clocks of the stationary frame are stationary, none move. All the clocks of the moving frame are at rest in that frame and move with the speed v. Thats all the clocks there are. So if you allow that τ can be greater than t then: all the moving clocks are synched so all read τ, including the one at the origin, which is the clock described above, and so the moving clock is not running slow.
Are you adding the condition that the x value chosen must result in the moving coordinate being 0?
I'm not adding that condition--Einstein is (from section 4 if his 1905 paper):
Further, we imagine one of the clocks which are qualified to mark the time t when at rest relatively to the stationary system, and the time τ when at rest relatively to the moving system, to be located at the origin of the co-ordinates of k, and so adjusted that it marks the time τ. What is the rate of this clock, when viewed from the stationary system?
Note the he is talking about "one of the clocks" and as far as I can tell, he meant that it was at rest in the stationary system for negative times and at rest in the moving system for positive times but nothing changes if he instead meant that this clock could have been at rest in the stationary system and it would have behaved like any of the other clocks at rest in the stationary system. But the important thing to note is that he is talking about just one clock, not all the clocks.
JM said:
If so then under these conditions the moving clock 'always' runs slow.
Good, I'm glad you see that.
JM said:
But what about the other conditions where the moving clocks (including the one at the origin) are not slow? Suppose that I am the observer stationed at the moving origin to record the time on my clock. From the above it seems that I would record a range of values, some greater and some smaller than the stationary clocks,depending on the x values chosen by the stationary observer. How would I separate out the slow ones as being valid, and the fast ones as being not valid? Wouldn't I deny that my clock was always slow?
Jm
You can pick anyone clock at rest any where and at any time in any frame and compare its rate of ticking to all the clocks in any other frame moving with respect to the first frame. That one clock will tick at a slower rate in the first frame than all the clocks in the second frame. I invite you to try the Lorentz Transform to see that this is true.

For example, let's pick the clock at x=321 and t=654 and transform it to a frame moving at 0.6c. The co-ordinates in the second frame are x'=-89.25 and t'=576.75. Now we increment the time on the first clock to t=655 and now x'=-90.00 and t'=578.00. Note that the t' has advanced by 1.25 while t has advanced by 1. And note also that it's a different clock that we are comparing the time to (x' has changed from -89.25 to -90.00).

Note that we are actually working the problem backwards. If we treat the second frame as the "stationary" frame and the first clock as moving in it, then the first clock is ticking at a slower rate than the co-ordinate time of the second frame. Use any other example and the same thing will hold true.
 
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  • #77
JM said:
Dale- When I refer to the 1905 model I mean that presented in section 3.
Relativity is more than one section of one paper. This is an absurd restriction. The Lorentz transform is a transform between different inertial coordinate systems. You can use it to analyze clocks following any timelike worldline, and you can use as many frames as you like. That is firmly established in the theory, regardless of if it was specifically included in one section of one specific paper.

This kind of extreme censorship is not acceptable.

JM said:
The purpose of this thread is to find out if anyone can provide the theory that supports the idea that moving clocks always run slow. So far I haven't seen it.
I did, with the formula on proper time that I posted. It applies for all inertial frames in flat spacetime, as you have been discussing.

JM said:
I hope you see from my added descriptions thay my analysis doesn't contradict.
I missed it.
 
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  • #78
ghwellsjr said:
x'=γ(vt-vt)=0

So this tells us that it is not all the clocks in the moving frame that the time co-ordinate applies to but only the one at the spatial origin of the moving frame which is where the moving clock that we are considering is located.

George- I don't understand this. Doesn't the synchronization procedure guarantee that all clocks at rest with each other must read the same value of time?
I tried the idea of following the path of a single clock and using the x transform, but the result is the same, the slow clock formula applies only for the case of x = v t, but there are other relations between x and t for which the moving clock is not slow. See my example in post 42. If moving clocks are always slow then these other values of x and t must be set aside and no event be allowed to occur there. And if events are allowed everywhere in the stationary frame there will be some events where t'-moving is not less than t-stationary.
JM
 
  • #79
yuiop said:
OK you have given that x = 0.5 and v = 0.8 and given the Lorentz transform:
[tex] t ' = \frac{t-vx}{\sqrt{1-v^2}} [/tex]
we get ... 0.625
JM said:
yuiop-Please check back, I gave x=0.5t, with c=1. Entering this in the transform leads to t' = t.

Hi JM, I completely misread that you were specifying x as variable dependent on t but DaleSpam eventually straightened me out :wink:. So yes, when x = 0.5 ct and the relative speed of frame S and S' is 0.8c then t' = t. In this case t' is the coordinate time measured in S' by 2 clocks at rest in S' and t is the coordinate time measured in S by 2 clocks at rest in S. Neither t' or t is a proper time interval measured by a single clock. By specifying x = 05 ct you are saying the events are equivalent to the end points of a particle moving at 0.5 c relative to S and this particle would not be at rest in either S or S'. If you measured the proper time between the two events using a single clock moving inertially and present at both events, then the proper time would be 0.6t. This proper time is less than the coordinate time measured in S or S' or any other reference frame with relative motion.

You have touched on the subject of whether x and t are independent or not several times and I think this is part of where the confusion lies. x and t can be completely independent and just label the coordinates of events, or you can if you wish, make them dependent as you have done. For example let us say we have a particle at coordinates (x,t) = (10,0) and one second later it is at coordinates (x,t) = (10.5,1). You can see that in this case that Δx = 0.5 cΔt but x≠0.5ct and is actually x=10+0.5ct.

Another source of confusion is the the statement "a moving clock always reads less time than a stationary clock" applies to a single moving clock and not to calculations obtained from multiple clocks.

Here is another example. Let us say that Δx=0, v=0.8 in the equation at the top, then we get Δt' = 1.666 Δt and conclude that the time measured by the frame in which the clock is moving (S') is greater than the time measured in the frame in which the clock is at rest (S).

OK, now if you allow Δx≠0 in the equation at the top, then we could have an extreme example where the relative velocity of the two frames is 0.8c and Δx = 0.8 and calculate that Δt' = 0.6 Δt and possibly mistakenly conclude that the time measured by the frame in which the clock is moving (S') is less then the time measured in the frame in which the clock is at rest (S). The mistake here is that by specifying Δx = 0.8 is no longer at rest in S but is now at rest in S'. When neither Δx or Δx' are zero, there is no clear definition of which frame is the frame in which the clock is moving and in which frame the clock is at rest in.
 
  • #80
JM said:
ghwellsjr said:
x'=γ(vt-vt)=0

So this tells us that it is not all the clocks in the moving frame that the time co-ordinate applies to but only the one at the spatial origin of the moving frame which is where the moving clock that we are considering is located.
George- I don't understand this. Doesn't the synchronization procedure guarantee that all clocks at rest with each other must read the same value of time?
It's not enough that they are at rest with each other--they also must be at rest in the frame in which they were synchronized and they must remain at rest in that frame forever.
JM said:
I tried the idea of following the path of a single clock and using the x transform, but the result is the same, the slow clock formula applies only for the case of x = v t, but there are other relations between x and t for which the moving clock is not slow. See my example in post 42. If moving clocks are always slow then these other values of x and t must be set aside and no event be allowed to occur there. And if events are allowed everywhere in the stationary frame there will be some events where t'-moving is not less than t-stationary.
JM
Remember, Einstein's goal in his paper:
What is the rate of this clock, when viewed from the stationary system?
He's not concerned about the actual time displayed on the clock but how its rate of ticking compares to the rate of ticking of the clocks in the stationary system. You are looking at the actual times on the clocks. What you need to do is what I showed you in my previous post which is to compare two events in both frames where the the clock is stationary in the moving frame and moving in the stationary frame.

So here's the process:

Pick two frames such that frame 1 is moving at v/c with respect to frame 2.
Pick any event in the frame 1. Call this event A1.
Change the time to any other value. Call this event B1.
Transform event A1 to event A2 in frame 2.
Transform event B1 to event B2 in frame 2.
Subtract the time co-ordinates for events A1 and B1 and call this Δt1.
Subtract the time co-ordinates for events A2 and B2 and call this Δt2.
Divide Δt1 by Δt2 and call this TD.

Verify that TD=√(1-v2/c2)

Here's an example with [t,x]:

We'll make frame 1 move at .8c with respect to frame 2.
We'll pick A1 to be [1234,5678]
We'll pick B1 to be [4321,5678]

A2 transforms to [-5514,7818]
B2 transforms to [-369,3702]

Δt1 is 1234-4321 = -3087
Δt2 is -5514-(-369) = -5145
TD is Δt1/Δt2 = -3087/(-5145) = 0.6

Verify that TD=√(1-v2/c2) = √(1-0.82) = √(1-.64) = √(0.36) = 0.6

The only difference between this example and the process that Einstein was doing is that he picked the x co-ordinates for A1 and B1 to be 0 and he picked the time co-ordinate for B1 to also be 0. This just means that he doesn't have to do the subtraction process because the rates of the clocks now are identical to the actual times on the clocks.

So let's repeat with these conditions:

We'll make frame 1 move at .8c with respect to frame 2.
We'll pick A1 to be [1234,0]
We'll pick B1 to be [0,0]

A2 transforms to [2056.667,-1645.333]
B2 transforms to [0,0]

Δt1 is 1234-0 = 1234
Δt2 is 2056.667-0 = 2056.667
TD is Δt1/Δt2 = 1234/2056.667 = 0.6
 
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  • #81
yuiop said:
Hi JM, I completely misread that you were specifying x as variable dependent on t but DaleSpam eventually straightened me out :wink:. So yes, when x = 0.5 ct and the relative speed of frame S and S' is 0.8c then t' = t.[/QUOTE ]
This is progress that you agree with my analysis. The process I use is the same used to get the slow clock formula. We both start with the time transform equation. I insert x = 0.5 ct,and 'slow' inserts x = v t. So the resulting equations are on the same footing. If t' = t √(1-v2/c2) means that the moving clock is slow, then t' = t means that the moving clock is not slow.
Another source of confusion is the the statement "a moving clock always reads less time than a stationary clock" applies to a single moving clock and not to calculations obtained from multiple clocks.
I'm not sure what you mean. In section 3 each frame has many clocks, and x and t are allowed a wide range of values independently. The above calcs show that the moving clock can be slow or not. Do you mean that in this case an analysis of a single clock would give a different result? Or are you referring to section 4 where there is only one clock?

I will need more time to review the rest of what you have written. In any event I must turn my attention to other pressing matters. I will check back to see any new posts at this thread
Thanks again for your attention.
JM
 
  • #82
George, Thanks for your detailed post 80. I want to study it but I must attend to other matters. I may reply but I intend to look into see any new posts.
I think I gained some new understanding from these discussions, but each step seems to raise new questions. Who knew there were two theories, a multi-clock one in section 3 and a single clock one in section 4?
Best wishes to you and to all who took the time to contribute.
JM
 
  • #83
JM said:
George, Thanks for your detailed post 80. I want to study it but I must attend to other matters. I may reply but I intend to look into see any new posts.
I think I gained some new understanding from these discussions, but each step seems to raise new questions. Who knew there were two theories, a multi-clock one in section 3 and a single clock one in section 4?
Best wishes to you and to all who took the time to contribute.
JM
There aren't two theories. It's one continuous discussion with more development in each section. There are multi-clocks stationary in each frame. With two frames, there are two sets of multi-clocks. You can pick any single clock from either frame and compare its rate of ticking to the multi-clocks in the other frame, one at a time, whichever clock it is adjacent to. The single clock in the first frame will tick at a slower rate than the multi-clocks in the second frame.

You can then pick any single clock from the second frame and compare it to the multi-clocks in the first frame and it will tick at a slower rate than the multi-clocks in the first frame, one at a time, whichever clock it is happens to be adjacent to.

So there are multi-clocks all the time, we just focus our attention on any single clock from one frame compared to a succession of multi-clocks in the other frame.
 
  • #84
JM said:
Who knew there were two theories, a multi-clock one in section 3 and a single clock one in section 4?
:rolleyes: There are not multiple theories of SR. There is one theory and that theory can handle any number of clocks moving in any possible arrangement. Your failure to work a problem correctly even after being corrected doesn't cause SR to undergo fission.
 
  • #85
JM said:
If t' = t √(1-v2/c2) means that the moving clock is slow, then t' = t means that the moving clock is not slow.
The correct expression for the proper time on an arbitrarily moving clock as viewed from any inertial frame is what I posted above.

DaleSpam said:
If you have a clock which is moving in an arbitrary fashion (including, but not limited to, x=vt) you use the following formula to calculate the time displayed on the clock:
[tex]\tau = \int \sqrt{1-v(t)^2/c^2} dt[/tex]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proper_time#In_special_relativity

The integrand is always less than or equal to 1, so you never get [itex]d\tau>dt[/itex] where t is the time coordinate in an inertial frame and v is the clock's velocity in that frame.

dt=dτ only if v=0 and otherwise is strictly slow.
 
  • #86
JM said:
If t' = t √(1-v2/c2) means that the moving clock is slow, then t' = t means that the moving clock is not slow.

With the conditions you specified, yes, t'=t but neither t or t' measurements were obtained using a single clock. The single clock is important. In your example the single clock is moving at 0.5c relative to frame S. If we make the first measurement in S when the moving clock passes the origin so x1=0, and another measurement 1 second later, we make the second measurement when the moving clock is at x2=0.5. The time measurement in frame S requires 2 clocks (one at x1=0 and the other at x2=0.5), so it is not a proper time measurement. In frame S' measurements are made at x1'=0 and x2'=-0.5 so in frame S' the time interval has to be measured using 2 clocks. The time interval measured by the single clock moving at 0.5c relative to frame S is tau=1*sqrt(1-v^2) = 0.866 seconds which is less than time interval measured in S or S'.

The important concept is that the time interval between two events measured by a single clock that is present at both events is always less than the time interval measured in any other reference frame using two clocks. A time interval measured by a single inertial clock is called a proper time measurement.

This idea can be expressed another way. If we have two events and can find a reference frame where those two events happen in the same place, then the time measured in that
frame will always be shorter than the time measured in any other frame.

In your example we had a clock moving at x= 0.5 ct or 0.5c relative to frame S. In another reference frame moving at 0.5c relative to S (and co-moving with the moving clock), the time interval between 2 events will be less than the time interval between the same 2 events measured in any other reference frame. In this co-moving frame the "moving" clock is stationary. As you can see, moving is a relative concept and so the expression "the moving clock" is not very well defined. It is better to say the proper time (which is measured by a single clock) is always less than the coordinate time (which is measured by more than one clock).

Let me know if that clears things up for you.
 
  • #87
Btw, JM, the t and t' in the Lorentz transforms are coordinate times in inertial frames. Not necessarily the time on any clock. The time on a clock is given by the expression I gave. That expression reduces to the coordinate time only for the case v=0. I.e. only clocks at rest measure coordinate time. Your v=.5c clock is not at rest in either frame so it does not measure coordinate time in either frame.
 
  • #88
The more I read the above discussion, the more it seems that the purpose of all our physical theories, instruments, and experiments, being to explore the actual physical world outside whatever distortions may take place due to our perceptions, appears to be overlooked. In short, the objective of physics appears to have been drowned by a preoccupation with psychological problems and issues closer to those of philosophy.

One problem that faced Einstein was the counter intuitive nature of the constancy of the speed of light. The other problem was the difficulty of finding empirical indicators of the true nature of the physical world. This could not have been more graphically illustrated than by the failure of the Michaelson Morley experiment to detect any variation in the speed of light, despite the undoubted high velocity of the Earth through the luminiferous aether, and which experiment did so by its very design which was such that not even the use of clocks was required, but which experiment instead used a comparison of wavelengths that could not have done other than pass through alternate reference frames relative to the aether.

I think that it is of immense importance to understand this, and to thereby understand that Einstein's second postulate, containing as it did the specification "... regardless of the state of rest or motion of its source ..." as in the English translation of his postulate, was based on the net empirical evidence accumulated in human experience by the time that he wrote down his second postulate. Due to the supposed fact of the existence of the aether, proven as it was thought by the fact that light traveled with ease through empty space yet at the same time possessed a wave quality among its characteristics, Einstein necessarily had also to deal with the aether. He was too wise to say that the aether does not exist, so he simply stated what appeared to be the case, and to do so with confidence if in the knowledge of the Michaelson Morley experiment, and that is, "No experiment of any sort can detect the aether."

So, the constancy of the speed of light was a distillation of Einstein’s of all known experience and also a translation of this in order to ascertain a fact of the physical world. All testing of that ‘fact’ hinges on comparing reference frames, and that comparison of reference frames involves the use not only of standard clocks, but also standard rulers, or rigid bodies.

I have always felt that it is hazardous to any understanding of Special Relativity not to understand the above. Furthermore, an understanding of the above I suspect could clarify any question, should such question exist, as to the purpose of the clocks, the relevance of their exact construction, or their physical accuracy, and that these only really matter to the experimental physicist.

To the theoretical physicist, the clocks are a kind of tool that is used, along with rigid bodies, to compare reference frames in motion relative to one another, whose exact construction does not matter, only their ability to be understood to represent identical ways of measuring time in the reference frames under scrutiny such that observers in those reference frames have identical experiences of time and space as provided by those tools.

This is not quite the case for the experimental physicist. Unfortunately however, for the experimental physicist, there are other problems in addition to the actual practical accuracy of the instruments, namely that of measuring the time and space of reference frames that cannot be occupied by independent observers and therefore have to be understood by inference rather than by direct measurement.
 
  • #89
yuiop said:
The important concept is that the time interval between two events measured by a single clock that is present at both events is always less than the time interval measured in any other reference frame using two clocks. A time interval measured by a single inertial clock is called a proper time measurement.

Well finally! The usual statement that 'moving clocks run slow' says nothing about proper clocks, and it has taken 5 pages to get to it here. The description in section 4 is of a proper clock. So why isn't the phrase ' proper clocks run slow' used? It certainly seems to clear things up a lot. That I can accept.
So I see the following picture.The Lorentz transforms appear general, allowing many different arrangements of events in the stationary frame. The special case of x = v t makes the clock at the origin of k into a proper clock. This should not inhibit the use of other arrangements of events, such as the one with x = 0.5ct, where there may not be any proper clocks.

In your example we had a clock moving at x= 0.5 ct or 0.5c relative to frame S. In another reference frame moving at 0.5c relative to S (and co-moving with the moving clock),..
In my example I did not imply or mean that there was a clock at x=0.5ct. x is the independent variable describing the location of events, eg lightning strikes, light flashes, or trains arriving re the stationary frame. I think of the x = v t in section 4 the same way, as a series of events, it's only in a roundabout way that x is the clock position.

Let me know if that clears things up for you.
I will give it some thought, but I think that does it for now.

Thanks again, y'all.
 
  • #90
JM said:
Well finally! The usual statement that 'moving clocks run slow' says nothing about proper clocks, and it has taken 5 pages to get to it here. The description in section 4 is of a proper clock. So why isn't the phrase ' proper clocks run slow' used?
All clocks measure proper time, there isn't a subset of clocks called proper clocks.

Also, it didn't take five pages, I posted the Wikipedia link on proper time back in post 36. Did you not even bother to read it?
 
  • #91
JM said:
Well finally! The usual statement that 'moving clocks run slow' says nothing about proper clocks, and it has taken 5 pages to get to it here. The description in section 4 is of a proper clock.
JM, can you please help me understand why post #28 on page 2 didn't communicate this to you?
ghwellsjr said:
Einstein's derivation of the Proper Time on a clock moving at speed v as a function of t, Coordinate Time, in a frame comes from section 4 of his 1905 paper.
JM said:
So why isn't the phrase ' proper clocks run slow' used? It certainly seems to clear things up a lot. That I can accept.
Even though Einstein didn't call the time τ (tau) on a moving clock "Proper Time", that is what it has come to mean and that's what I called it in post #28. He also didn't call his theory "Special Relativity" in his paper but that doesn't detract from the fact that his paper is the origin of Special Relativity.
 
  • #92
ghwellsjr said:
JM, can you please help me understand why post #28 on page 2 didn't communicate this to you?

George- At the time the discussion made no connection between the phrase " moving clocks run slow" and the idea of a proper clock. To me the phrase means that any value of the coordinates x,t of an event, when entered into the LT, produces a value of t' such that t'≤t. Such is not the case, as my example shows and as some replies agreed. So it took some time to see that your meaning is " moving proper clocks run slow".
JM
 
  • #93
Again, there is no such thing as a "proper clock". All clocks measure proper time. There is not some subset of clocks which are called "proper clocks".

Therefore, the meaning is "moving clocks run slow", not "moving proper clocks run slow" since there is no such thing.
 
  • #94
Thought digitial watches were more accurate than clocks? or have I been watching the wrong channel.
 
  • #95
DaleSpam said:
Your v=.5c clock is not at rest in either frame so it does not measure coordinate time in either frame.
DaleSpam- I don't have a clock moving at v=.5c. I have a set of events that lie along the line x= 0.5ct with respect to the stationary frame. Are you just pulling my chain?

Could you tell me of references where I could read about the theory that allows linking of frames moving in different directions, and clocks moving in various directions, and all moving clocks being proper clocks , ie each clock is present at two or more events?
JM
 
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  • #96
JM said:
DaleSpam- I don't have a clock moving at v=.5c. I have a set of events that lie along the line x= 0.5ct with respect to the stationary frame.
If there was no clock then how would you even think that you were showing anything about a moving clock? Your intentions and your words seem utterly divorced from any relationship whatsoever to your math.

JM said:
Could you tell me of references where I could read about the theory that allows linking of frames moving in different directions, and clocks moving in various directions, and all moving clocks being proper clocks , ie each clock is present at two or more events?
The theory is SR. The Wikipedia page I linked to on proper time is a good place to start, which is why I linked to it. If you want to know the time displayed on any arbitrarily moving clock in any inertial frame then you use the simple proper time formula. If you want to convert the scenario to any other inertial frame then you use the Lorentz transform.

And for the third time now, there is no such thing as proper clocks. All clocks measure proper time and all clocks are present at an infinite number of events (as is any material object).
 
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  • #97
JM said:
ghwellsjr said:
JM, can you please help me understand why post #28 on page 2 didn't communicate this to you?
George- At the time the discussion made no connection between the phrase " moving clocks run slow" and the idea of a proper clock. To me the phrase means that any value of the coordinates x,t of an event, when entered into the LT, produces a value of t' such that t'≤t. Such is not the case, as my example shows and as some replies agreed. So it took some time to see that your meaning is " moving proper clocks run slow".
JM
I'm afraid I still don't understand why there was a lack of communication. Maybe it would help for you to explain what you mean by "the idea of a proper clock" and why "moving proper clocks run slow" communicates something that "moving clocks run slow" doesn't.
 
  • #98
Hi JM, perhaps some of confusion is due to me, because I have never been that good at the formal semantics of this stuff, which is a sin because the using the correct language of science is critical to its understanding and application. Anyway, when Dalespam said ...
DaleSpam said:
... there is no such thing as proper clocks. All clocks measure proper time and all clocks are present at an infinite number of events (as is any material object).
... he is technically correct (as always :wink:). All individual clocks measure proper time with the emphasis on "individual". The statements "moving proper clocks run slow" and "moving clocks run slow" might be better expressed as "all (individual) moving clocks run slow". We have to contrast this idea against coordinate time intervals which deduces the time interval from calculations involving multiple synchronised clocks. When two events are spatially separated the coordinate time is always longer than the time measured by a single clock that is present at both events. Dalespam is also correct when he says "all clocks are present at an infinite number of events" but in this context we are interested in clocks that are present at the events on the worldline under consideration. The statement "moving proper clocks run slow" is awkward at best because as Dalespam points out all clocks (individually) measure proper time. When you specified x = 0.5 ct you are defining a set of events or effectively the wordline of an object moving at 0.5c and you asked about the time intervals measured in two frames moving at 0.8c relative to each other. Since this hypothetical object is not at rest in either of those frames, the time interval measured in those frames are both coordinate time intervals and there is no requirement that a coordinate time interval measured in a given frame is greater than the coordinate time interval measured in another frame with relative motion to the first or vice versa. I have probably muddied the waters again, but I will try and clarify things (maybe for both of us) if there is still some confusion.
 
  • #99
George- As a general explanation, I note the great variety of responses to my posts. Some hostile, most ignore my post and talk about something else, some suggest ideas that may or may not be related, and some outright misquote me, and some reply from some higher dimension of advanced theory. And from these I must make some reply. So there is ample room for mis-communication. Perhaps I'm not as perceptive as I wish I was. The 'rules' people advise, under these conditions, to proceed with the main objective and not try to answer all respnoses. That is what I've tried to do. (Another difficulty is the rarity of a responder agreeing with what I say or even agreeing with my reasoning. This only makes me try again to state my case, instead of pursueing his idea.)

ghwellsjr said:
I'm afraid I still don't understand why there was a lack of communication. Maybe it would help for you to explain what you mean by "the idea of a proper clock" and why "moving proper clocks run slow" communicates something that "moving clocks run slow" doesn't.
By Taylor and Wheeler a proper clock is present at the place and time of two events. This places a restriction on the clock to be considered, compared to the many clocks envisioned to be in the moving frame. For a particular set of events there may not be any proper clocks. ( Leaving DaleSpams ideas to later) With this restriction the standard result makes sense.
As I mentioned above, the phrase 'moving clocks run slow' implies that all the moiving clocks have t' < t for any arrangement of the events given by x,t. The phrase 'proper clocks run slow' acknowledges the restriction to a single clock moving between two events.
JM
 
  • #100
JM said:
The phrase 'proper clocks run slow' acknowledges the restriction to a single clock moving between two events.
Surely every clock is a single clock, moving along its worldline between events ?
 
  • #101
yuiop said:
Hi JM, perhaps some of confusion is due to me,
I think your contributions have been helpful, keep them coming.
The statements "moving proper clocks run slow" and "moving clocks run slow" might be better expressed as "all (individual) moving clocks run slow".
However expressed a better statement could have helped me, and maybe others.
Dalespam is also correct when he says "all clocks are present at an infinite number of events"
I sense that DaleSpam is operating in a higher theory. If I get a handle on the elementary theory, 1905, and some texts I hope to learn what that theory is.
When you specified x = 0.5 ct you are defining a set of events or effectively the wordline of an object moving at 0.5c
I view x = .5 ct as only a set of events, with no associated moving object. In 1905 section 4 did Einstein associate x = vt with a moving object?
JM
 
  • #102
JM said:
ghwellsjr said:
I'm afraid I still don't understand why there was a lack of communication. Maybe it would help for you to explain what you mean by "the idea of a proper clock" and why "moving proper clocks run slow" communicates something that "moving clocks run slow" doesn't.
By Taylor and Wheeler a proper clock is present at the place and time of two events.
Can you provide a reference to where Taylor and Wheeler made this statement? If you can't find an online reference, please quote from the book you are looking at and provide the name and page number. Please don't modify the quote--make it exact--and make sure you provide adequate context.
JM said:
This places a restriction on the clock to be considered, compared to the many clocks envisioned to be in the moving frame. For a particular set of events there may not be any proper clocks. ( Leaving DaleSpams ideas to later) With this restriction the standard result makes sense.
As I mentioned above, the phrase 'moving clocks run slow' implies that all the moiving clocks have t' < t for any arrangement of the events given by x,t. The phrase 'proper clocks run slow' acknowledges the restriction to a single clock moving between two events.
JM
You are confusing the times displayed on two clocks (t' < t) with the tick rates those two clocks run at (Δt' < Δt). In order to compare how fast two clocks are running, you cannot just look at the times displayed on those two clocks unless the start times were both zero. This is the condition that Einstein was talking about in his 1905 paper. If you want to look at other situations, you have to take a difference between pairs of times on the two clocks. Please reread previous posts where I have discussed this.
 
  • #103
JM said:
I sense that DaleSpam is operating in a higher theory. If I get a handle on the elementary theory, 1905, and some texts I hope to learn what that theory is
It is the same theory as everyone else uses. The Lorentz transform for transforming coordinates between different reference frames, and the proper time formula for calculating the time measured by a clock.
 
  • #104
JM said:
By Taylor and Wheeler a proper clock is present at the place and time of two events.
OK, now I see what's going on. I did a search and found this reference to Taylor and Wheeler's Spacetime Physics where they mention a proper clock on page 160:

http://books.google.com/books?id=PDA8YcvMc_QC&pg=PA160&dq#v=onepage&q&f=false

However, they define a proper clock on page 10 which is not available online [at least it wasn't yesterday, today it is?] so I checked the book out of the library and what they mean by a proper clock is one that travels between two events at a constant speed (without regard to any frame). In other words, it is measuring the frame invariant spacetime interval but this can only work for timelike intervals.
JM said:
This places a restriction on the clock to be considered, compared to the many clocks envisioned to be in the moving frame. For a particular set of events there may not be any proper clocks. ( Leaving DaleSpams ideas to later) With this restriction the standard result makes sense.
The restriction they are talking about is when the spacetime interval for the two events are spacelike, meaning that a clock would have to travel at faster than the speed of light to get from one event to the other. Instead, this interval is measured with a rigid ruler between the two events in a frame in which the events occur at the same time. They don't, however, call this a proper ruler.
JM said:
As I mentioned above, the phrase 'moving clocks run slow' implies that all the moiving clocks have t' < t for any arrangement of the events given by x,t. The phrase 'proper clocks run slow' acknowledges the restriction to a single clock moving between two events.
JM
Actually, although that single clock moving between two events at a constant speed is measuring the invariant spacetime interval, it can also be measured in a frame in which the clock is at rest and then it becomes identical to a co-ordinate clock. Look at page 160 of the link to the book above. There you will see "the frame clock is the proper clock". They use the term "frame clock" to mean "co-ordinate clock". So in this case, when the velocity is zero (clock is at rest, the events occur at the same place), gamma is one and so the "proper clock" never runs slow in the frame in which it is at rest. But in other frames it can have a speed other than zero and so can run slower than a co-ordinate clock in that other frame.

But this unique definition of a "proper clock" is not what we normally mean by proper time because we may want to have a clock that accelerates between the two events. If you look up the wikipedia article on "proper time", you will see that it makes the point:
An accelerated clock will measure a smaller elapsed time between two events than that measured by a non-accelerated (inertial) clock between the same two events.

Now since Taylor and Wheeler's "proper clock" can never accelerate, it will measure a greater time and therefore run faster than any other clock that accelerates between the two events.

I hope this clears up the confusion.
 
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  • #105
ghwellsjr said:
OK, now I see what's going on. I did a search and found this reference to Taylor and Wheeler's Spacetime Physics where they mention a proper clock on page 160:
...
I hope this clears up the confusion.
It does. Thanks for taking the trouble. It's a good idea but calling it a 'proper' clock is a bit non-standard since all clocks measure proper time.
 

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