neopolitan
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Doc Al said:I fail to see how this example has much to do with the standard "twin paradox" scenario.
Also, don't forget to include the time it takes for Jane's signal to Joe to reach Joe.
The standard "twin paradox" is poorly stated, and that is why it appears to be a paradox (note Hurkyl's complaint in an earlier post). What I am showing here is that the same result can be achieved with no acceleration, which is often what is brought into explain the broken symmetry.
And I didn't forget the time it takes for Jane's signal to reach Joe.
Firstly, I specifically mentioned a spot which was anchored to Joe, it is a distance of L from Joe. That means that the intellectual effort required to subtract the signal's travel time is trivial. You can do it, I can do it and I assumed that Joe could do it. This is another one of these unstated assumptions.
Secondly, Joe doesn't even need a clock. We tend to always talk in terms of two clocks, because it may seem simpler, but in my scenario Joe's clock was entirely redundant. Jane moves between Joe and the spot which is at a distance of L at a velocity of v. Again, we are talking about a trivial intellectual effort. According to Joe, it should take Jane a period of L/v to travel from where he is to the spot at a distance of L. He doesn't need a clock to work that out. Once the signal's travel time is factored in, his totally redundant clock will confirm that this calculation is correct.
cheers,
neopolitan