Austin0 said:
You and kev seem to have both ignored post #43 in which I posed a possible counter for kev's demonstration of the problem (with only inertial frames). And a different conclusion wrt elapsed proper time.
If there is some flaw in what I presented I would be glad to learn of it.
You have consistently failed to address the OP's real question.
Disregarding acceleration as a factor (which you have in fact included above) but simply operating with the essential kinematic assumption of SR, what would prevent a perfectly symmetrical Minkowski diagram of the Earth from the perspective of the accelerated frame??
A mirror image??
A plot of the spacetime locations of the Earth relative to the accelerated frame.
I.e. The Earth having the same curved segments, inertial segments etc.
If this was done you would then have totally reciprocal and mutually exclusive elapsed proper times as derived from integrated worldlines between events , no??
As far as I have seen the OP has a relevant question and having read a great many twin threads it appears that there is no real consensus as to the proper resolution and whether acceleration is a crucial criteria or not. Everyone agrees there is no real paradox and agrees on the outcome but there still seems to be questions worth pursuing regarding both acceleration and simultaneity. IMHO
matheinste said:
No matter how you dress it up, or what scenario you propose, in SR, the proper time along a worldline, that is the time measuired by a clock that is present at all points along the worldline, is a measure of the spacetime distance along that worldline. There s no ambiguity and no lack of consensus on this point. Whether the Earth accelerates or the rocket accelerates or both accelerate, whether symmetrically or not, the proper time along the wordlines can measured by a clock traveling along the wordline or calculated by any observer, and compared. There will no disagreement about the reuslts.
As for the effect of acceleration on clocks, the clock hypothesis assumes ther is no effect and this is borne out by laboratory performed experiments to a very high degree. Of course for diiferential time intervals, which of couse require curved wordlines to describe them geometrically, we need acceleration to produce them, but it this curvature of the spactime path which leads to the different proper times, or not, along two wordlines. The acceleration is the cause of this curvature but has no direct effects on clocks. The compared readings on the clocks are in effect, loosely speaking, a measure of the relative curvature of the wordlines.
Matheinste
Although everything you have said here is true it does not actually address anything I said.
There is no disagreement regarding the fundamental interpretation of worldlines and integrated path lengths as proper time. I certainly have no question in this regard and from what I have read from the OP that is not his point or question either.
As far as the clock hypothesis goes, I have myself on more than one occasion cited it as a counter to the acceleration argument with regard to non-reciprocal dilation.
So all of your post is another straw man argument aimed at questions never asked and positions never stated.
In the meantime totally ignoring explicit questions and arguments.
kev made , in his own words "difinitive " statements wrt his own scenario with only inertial frames.
Part of this was the assertion that his conclusions would be agreed upon by all inertial observers.
I offered a simple and clear example of one possible inertial frame that seemed to disagree with this definitive statement.
I could very well be wrong. If that is so then it should be simple for you to show me this and demonstrate your case.
I offered the simple premise that simply based on kinematics and coordinate systems it is easily possible to plot the Earth's time/space positions relative to the accelerated system with the accelerated system at rest. AS per the OP's repeated question. If this is done the application of the same integration of the Earth's worldline , the same interpretation of proper time , would produce the reciprocal but opposite conclusion.
This is not done for other reasons. I.e. an acclerated frame is not valid, acceleration is real etc etc etc.
I am not saying these are not valid reasons only that to simply say proper time is the intergration of the worldline simply begs the question.
I certainly have no answer as to the best resolution to the twin question or non-reciprocal dilation , only the belief that it represents a meaningful question
kev said:
However, I can make a definitive statement about the elapsed proper time between any two timelike events.
Let us say A remains at rest in frame A. All references to coordinate measurements will mean measurements made by observers at rest in frame A. B passes A at coordinate time zero at a coordinate velocity of +0.8c. After a coordinate time of 10 years, B passes C who is going in the opposite direction with a coordinate velocity of -0.8c. The coordinate distance between event (B passing A) = event(B,A) and event(B,C) is 8 lightyears. Other observers in different reference frames will disagree with the coordinate times, distance and velocities measured by A and will also disagree on what clock A reads at event(B,C), but all observers will agree that 6 years of proper time elapses on clock B between events (A,B) and (B,C). (Definitive statement 1.) Eventually clock C passes A at event(C,A). All observers agree that 6 years of proper time passes on clock C between events (B,C) and (C,A). (Definitive statement 2). All observers will agree that 20 years of proper time elapses on clock A between events (B,A) and (C,A). (Definitive statement 3). All observers agree that the combined elapsed proper time between the 3 events (B,A), (B,C) and (C,A) is 12 years (Definitive statement 4) and that this proper time interval is less that the proper time interval between events (B,A) and (C,A). (Definitive statement 5).
Austin0 said:
Suppose there is a frame D such that A and C are traveling relative to it, at 0.5c and -0.5c
respectively. At event (B,C) D.. t'''=0 and the spatial interval between A and C is dx''' with observed clock times in A and C of t0 and t''0
As observed in D ...A and C meet at dx'''/2 with observed clock times in A and C of T and T''
For both frames dx'''*0.5/ 0.5c = dt , dt'' from this it would seem to follow that dt = T-t0 =T''-t''0= dt'' Wouldn't this be equal elapsed proper time observed in both frames between events (B,C) and (C,A) ?
Do you see some reason why this would not apply??