yuiop
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starthaus said:This is false, the only reason that there is such a disparity between the values is that you have chosen a very long "cruising" time and a very short period of acceleration. In reality, if you had chosen comparable values to the "cruise" time T_c vs. the acceleration time T_a you would have found that the difference in proper time between the two twins is equally spread between the two effects and, that both depend on acceleration a:
d \tau=2T_c/ \sqrt{1+(aT_a/c)^2}+4\frac{c}{a} asinh(aT_a/c)
for the accelerating twin
starthaus said:I know perfectly well how the proper time us calculated, so please, explain the term in \frac{c}{a} asinh(aT_a/c). Is this a function of v only?
The correct equation for the proper time d \tau of the traveling twin with cruising time T_c and acceleration time T_a (both as measured in the inertial stay at home twins rest frame) can be stated as a function of v only like this:
d \tau=\frac{T_c}{\gamma}+\frac{c T_a}{v \gamma} \, \, asinh(v \gamma/c)
Where v is the cruising velocity and \gamma is 1/\sqrt{1-v^2/c^2}.
For a numerical example let us say that the total cruising time T_c is 10 years and the total acceleration time T_a is also 10 years, (both measured in the rest frame of the stay at home twin) so that the inertial twin ages by 20 years during the round trip of the travelling/accelerating twin. The cruising velocity of the traveling twin is 0.8c relative to the stay at home twin and the gamma factor is 1/0.6. Just to be absolutely clear, the traveling twin goes away from home at 0.8c for 5 yers, then spends 5 years slowing down to a stop, another 5 years accelerating to 0.8c and finally the last 5 years cruising at 0.8c for a round trip time of 20 years, all as measured by the inertial twin.
The proper time that elapses on the traveling twins clock in years is:
d \tau=10*0.6+10*0.6/0.8* \,asinh(0.8/0.6) = 6+8.23959 = 14.2396
Note that most of the time dilation happens during the cruise phase even though equal times are spent cruising and accelerating according to the inertial twin. This is because on average the instantaneous relative velocity during the acceleration phase is less than the cruising relative velocity and the acceleration has not increased the time dilation.
Your equation is wrong and predicts the proper time of the traveling twin to be longer than the stay at home twins' proper time. Basically you screwed up the factors when hacking your derivation. You didn't get it from any textbook did you?
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