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about time measurement vs measurement of movement |
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| Jan22-09, 06:09 AM | #1 |
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about time measurement vs measurement of movement
hi.
as a non-physicist reading physicsbokks i have a problem understanding how, in richard feynmans words, "time itself", is measured. feynman seems to move from clock-measurement to "time"-measurement without a justification. as tsr clairly states time-dilation i have a problem of understanding the terminology. do we talk of "time going slower" or of "clocks going slower"? this might seem ridiculous, but it is a point i simply do not understand when reading feynmans "six not so easy pieces" and other semi-introductory descriptions of the theory of special relativity. |
| Jan22-09, 06:18 AM | #2 |
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| Jan22-09, 06:28 AM | #3 |
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thanks a.t but i fear that my question is not completely clear. you say "clocks measure time", but it appears to me as if clocks refer to movement in time, not to time itself (as succession). our clocks are based on the regular movement of planets, and regular movement of atoms if you wish, but they are anyway based on regular movement. my problem is that if movement occurs in time and space, there has to be a separation between movement and space and time. but a clock appears to measure only movement. so: is there no separation between clocks and time in tsr? if so; might i just as well say clock-dilation as time-dilation?
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| Jan22-09, 06:45 AM | #4 |
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about time measurement vs measurement of movement |
| Jan22-09, 06:46 AM | #5 |
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thank you a.t.. thats all i need to know.
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| Jan22-09, 07:13 AM | #6 |
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Hello rabbetussa.
Think of a clock as something periodic (it ticks). the ticks mark the progress of time and counting them gives us the amount of time. Of course we require this ticking rate or period to be constant for an observer at rest with the clock. Matheinste. |
| Jan22-09, 03:07 PM | #7 |
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The idea that clocks slow down (instead of time itself) is essentially Lorentz's aether theory, and it is experimentally indistinguishable from SR. The reason that we typically prefer the idea that time "slows down" is because it is simpler (Occhams razor). The alternative is to explain the several individual mechanisms by which light clocks, mechanical clocks, quartz clocks, atomic clocks, particle half lifes, etc. each coincidentally slow down by the exact same amount.
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| Jan23-09, 02:40 AM | #8 |
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thank you dalespam. both for the info and for the will to help. it amazes me how helpful and nice people are in this site.
your answers help me a lot in understanding the topic. would it be possible (not trying to pose a new theory here, but to rephrase into a viable metaphysical language) to say that: "in a moving system, all internal prosess slows down by the same ratio as a function of the relative speed of the system".? if it is then maybe i'm finally getting it. (my major difficulty is that i am normally studying metaphysics of the natural sciences and the terminology is a bit different concerning the consepts of time and space). |
| Jan23-09, 04:14 AM | #9 |
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Hello rabbetussa
First of all you cannot just say “in a moving system” as there is no absolute rest system. If you have two frames moving inertially relative to each other, call them A and B, then an observer in A will observe all processes in B to be running slower than his own and vice versa. The amount of slowing is a function of the relative speed. This is of course after allowing for light transmission times. There is no objective truth as to who is keeping correct time. Each sees the others time as running slower than his own. Matheinste |
| Jan23-09, 04:30 AM | #10 |
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This sort of question come around like clockwork. No one seems to care that rulers measure distance. Rulers don't come around like clockwork. There may be something profound here.
Maybe rulers questions are just spaced out at a characteristic distance---say 45000 miles. |
| Jan23-09, 04:43 AM | #11 |
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Hello Phrak
I think that people feel more at home with distances. Time seems much more mysterious. Of course there are fundamental issues with length measurement as well. Matheinste |
| Jan23-09, 05:12 AM | #12 |
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| Jan23-09, 05:13 AM | #13 |
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| Jan23-09, 05:27 AM | #14 |
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| Jan23-09, 11:46 AM | #15 |
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| Jan23-09, 12:10 PM | #16 |
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| Jan23-09, 12:40 PM | #17 |
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All internal processes in one inertial frame (one moving system) will appear slower when viewed by an observer in another inertial frame moving relative to the first. |
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| special relativity., time measurement |
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