kochanskij said:
Are you saying the SR breaks down? Why?
Yes. I already said why: The first postulate fails in such a universe.
kochanskij said:
This is a much better question. We know why this scenario breaks with standard SR, but what exactly is the consequence of this?
If you look at the paper that I linked earlier (
https://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0503070 ) it shows how this works out. First, for notation I will use unprimed coordinates for the coordinates in the preferred frame, and for simplicity I will use units where ##c=1## and a single spatial dimension.
We can express relativity in the metric used: $$ds^2=-dt^2+dx^2$$
Then the fact that the universe is closed is expressed by the equivalence relation $$(t,x)=(t,x+nL)$$ where ##n## is an integer and ##L## is the size of the closed universe in the preferred frame. These two equations allow us to analyze the situation as follows. We can use completely standard special relativity due to the metric, including the Lorentz transform with the resulting length contraction, time dilation, etc. And we can envision the closed universe condition as the same as a standard open universe with an infinitely repeating set of any events or worldlines where the integer ##n## identifies which repetition we are indicating.
But your question in the OP involves both ##n=0## and ##n=1##. So you have to use the equivalence relation above, not just the Lorentz transform. And thus there is no way for the nose to hit the tail (assuming the proper length of the craft is less than ##L##).
Now, to see what happens we can use the Lorentz transform on the equivalence relation to get the corresponding equivalence relation for a primed frame moving with velocity ##v## relative to the unprimed (preferred) frame. $$(t',x')=(t'-\gamma v n L, x' +\gamma n L)$$ where ##\gamma=(1-v^2)^{-1/2}##.
So the key is that everything works as normal in this universe as long as we can deal with a single ##n##, say ##n=0##. But as soon as we introduce multiple ##n##, then SR no longer applies.
kochanskij said:
But special relativity still applies locally, doesn't it?
As
@Ibix said, it isn't exactly about locality. It is about the topology. You can have as large an experiment as you like. As long as your experiment doesn't involve multiple ##n## then all of the usual open-universe SR principles apply. You can travel multiple times around the universe, and as long as you are still only interacting with the ##n=0## copies, then all is standard.
But your OP is explicitly about a scenario involving the ##n=0## nose reaching the ##n=1## tail. So you cannot merely apply special relativity. You must apply both special relativity and the equivalence relation above. With that we see that there is simply no way for the ##n=0## nose to reach the ##n=1## tail assuming that the proper length of the ship is less than ##L##.