A A better way of talking about time?

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The discussion critiques the concept of time dilation in special relativity, labeling it a "pedagogical disaster" and arguing that it complicates understanding by introducing unnecessary confusion. Participants emphasize the importance of distinguishing between proper time, which is invariant, and coordinate time, which is observer-dependent. They suggest that teaching should focus more on geometric interpretations rather than coordinate-based approaches to enhance comprehension. The conversation also touches on the historical baggage surrounding concepts like relativistic mass and the challenges of unlearning misconceptions ingrained in popular media. Ultimately, there is a call for a shift in educational methods to better convey the principles of relativity.
  • #61
Yuras said:
I don't see how it invalidates the statement "No coordinates are needed to describe the fact that a specific emitter emitting a specific photon attributes to it the energy ##E_a##" and the rest.
It doesn't invalidate that statement, but (together with posting #55) this is an example to invalidate the statement in posting #54:

Yuras said:
In both cases you'll get exactly the same result, right?
 
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  • #62
Sagittarius A-Star said:
No. If you calculate the first inner product i.e. in frame then the components of are different from if you calculate the second inner product i.e. in frame .
Ah, I see what's going on here. You are answering a different question.
I'm saying that timelike component of ##p## in the reference frame of ##A## is numerically the same as ##p\cdot u_a##. The same way for ##B## case. I'm asking: do you agree with this?
 
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  • #63
Yuras said:
do you agree with this?
Yes.
 
  • #64
Sagittarius A-Star said:
Yes.
Great! So as far as I'm concerned we established that these two definitions of energy agree numerically, so for me they are just two different definitions of the same thing. Of course you are free to differentiate between them if you want.
 
  • #65
Yuras said:
Great! So as far as I'm concerned we established that these two definitions of energy agree numerically
No. Which two definitions?
 
  • #66
Sagittarius A-Star said:
No. Which two definitions?
The energy as a timelike coordinate of the 4-momentum and energy as a scalar product of 4-momentum and the observer's 4-velocity.
In #54 I literally applied both definitions relative to observer ##A## and got the same results. Then I applied both definitions relative to observer ##B## and again got the same results.
 
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  • #67
Yuras said:
The energy as a timelike coordinate of the 4-momentum and energy as a scalar product of 4-momentum and the observer's 4-velocity.
In #54 I literally applied both definitions relative to observer ##A## and got the same results. Then I applied both definitions relative to observer ##B## and again got the same results.
OK.
 
  • #68
There are many different concepts of ”energy”. None of them privileged or unique. The most common one in SR being the time component of the 4-momentum in a Minkowski frame (note: saying ”time-like component” is insufficient without the understanding that we are dealing with a Minkowski frame. A 4-momentum may have anything between 0 and 4 time-like components dependent on the basis used)

Another possibility not yet mentioned here is the inner product of 4-momentum with the time-like Killing field of a stationary spacetime. Again, in Minkowski space there are several such and they all boil down to the same inner products as mentioned already - the energy then depending on the time-like Killing field chosen.
 
  • #69
Yuras said:
KE depends on observer, but it doesn't depend on coordinates.
I disagree. Usually observers and coordinates are considered to be synonyms. But insofar as they are distinct, it is the coordinate system that determines the KE, not the observer.

For example, say I am driving in a car observing someone throw a ball. I am free to use coordinates where I am at rest, but I am also free to use coordinates where the ground is at rest. The KE of the ball is different in those two coordinate systems even though I am the same observer.

Yuras said:
The same observer will measure they same value for KE in rectangular, spherical, polar or any other coordinates.
This is not true because “any other coordinates” also includes boosts. As I just described the same observer will obtain different versions of the KE of a ball depending on if they are using coordinates where the car is at rest or where the ground is at rest.

Yuras said:
At this point I'm mostly interesting in defending against your point that I invented the whole thing or it's something non-standard. I hope you agree that the source is pretty standard, don't you?
I agree that the source is standard (authoritative even), and I agree that you didn’t invent the concept or the formula.

I only claim that calling that quantity simply “energy” is your personal usage. It does not appear that MTW supports your usage as they carefully qualify the term in their descriptions.

Yuras said:
Oops, it probably sounds a bit passive-aggressive, sorry
No worries at all. My skin is substantially thicker than that (metaphorically speaking).

Yuras said:
I want clarity in this question because otherwise people will continue referring to this conversation claiming that I inverted the whole concept
I agree that the concept is a standard one: the energy measured by some device. It is just your calling it simply “energy” that is non-standard, and the MTW quotes use wording that I prefer.

Yuras said:
I think the "as measured by" part is here for disambiguation.
The disambiguation is important for communication. That is a big part of pedagogy.

Similarly, it is important to disambiguate between “proper time” and “coordinate time”.
 
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  • #70
Sagittarius A-Star said:
In this Misner example, emitter and absorber measure different photon energies because of the Doppler effect and ##E=hf##.
Not in that example, no. That example is the "centrifuge and photon" example, and the whole point of it is that there is no Doppler shift in that particular scenario--the emitter and absorber both measure the same frequency/energy. The example is meant to illustrate how much easier it is to calculate that answer using the geometric, coordinate-free viewpoint.
 
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  • #71
PeterDonis said:
Not in that example, no. That example is the "centrifuge and photon" example, and the whole point of it is that there is no Doppler shift in that particular scenario--the emitter and absorber both measure the same frequency/energy. The example is meant to illustrate how much easier it is to calculate that answer using the geometric, coordinate-free viewpoint.
OK. I didn't read section 2.8 in the book. I only looked at the short citation from @Yuras in posting #50 and wrongly assumed, that this would refer to a general scenario.
 
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  • #72
Dale said:
I disagree. Usually observers and coordinates are considered to be synonyms. But insofar as they are distinct, it is the coordinate system that determines the KE, not the observer.
Then I guess we are using different terminology again.
Dale said:
I agree that the source is standard (authoritative even), and I agree that you didn’t invent the concept or the formula.
Thanks!
Dale said:
It is just your calling it simply “energy” that is non-standard, and the MTW quotes use wording that I prefer.
Fare enough. Though I don't think MTW actually distinguish between "energy" and "energy measured by". E.g. in the other quote (see #50) they say "No coordinates are needed to describe the fact that a specific emitter emitting a specific photon attributes to it the energy ##E_a##" without any "measured by".
In fact, both definitions give the same numerical answer, so the difference between them is artificial in my opinion.
Dale said:
The disambiguation is important for communication. That is a big part of pedagogy.
I meant that "measured by" part was there to disambiguate between two different values, ##E_a## and ##E_b##, not between different definitions of energy. MTW use "energy" and "energy measured by" interchangeably. Cf. proper time and coordinate time, which actually are different things since they have different values, and MTW carefully distinguish between them.
 
  • #73
Yuras said:
In fact, both definitions give the same numerical answer, so the difference between them is artificial in my opinion.
The two concepts* are distinct as they transform differently. They do not give the same numerical value on transformation.

* The two concepts being ##p^t=E/c## and ##E=g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu##. They both require further disambiguation as the coordinate system needs to be specified for ##p^t## to be meaningful and ##u## needs to be specified for ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## to be meaningful
 
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  • #74
Dale said:
The two concepts are distinct as they transform differently. They do not give the same numerical value on transformation.
We discussed this with @Sagittarius A-Star above, see #54. The transformation rules are irrelevant here. In one case you apply Lorentz transformations while in other case you change the observer's 4-velocity. The result is the same. At least that's my understanding of these concepts, and I'm pretty sure that's how MTW understand them. (In fact I learned these concepts from MTW)
 
  • #75
Yuras said:
We discussed this
I didn’t discuss it, and I don’t agree. Clearly, ##p^t## changes under coordinate transformation and ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## does not.
 
  • #76
Dale said:
I didn’t discuss it, and I don’t agree. Clearly, ##p^t## changes under coordinate transformation and ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## does not.
I never said they transform the same way. Of course they don't, and it's obvious enough to make it not worth discussing. I already explained what I meant by "they give the same number" and why transformation rules are irrelevant here.

To be clear: I'm not denying your right to distinguish these two concepts. I'm just explaining why I find the difference artificial.
 
  • #77
Yuras said:
I already explained what I meant by "they give the same number" and why transformation rules are irrelevant here
Well, the transformation rules are certainly relevant if the claim is that two concepts are not distinct and yet they transform differently.

Yuras said:
I'm not denying your right to distinguish these two concepts. I'm just explaining why I find the difference artificial
I think failing to distinguish them is pedagogically dangerous
 
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  • #78
Dale said:
I didn’t discuss it, and I don’t agree. Clearly, ##p^t## changes under coordinate transformation and ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## does not.
This is somewhat disingenious. Clearly ##u\cdot p## changes when you change ##u##. You cannot refer to energy as defined by the time component of 4-momentum without picking a reference frame just as you cannot refer to energy as defined by ##u\cdot p## without defining ##u##. The time component of a vector ##w## is quite literally equal to ##e_t\cdot w## where ##e_t## is the timelike vector of the coordinate basis tetrad. Changing coordinates obviously changes ##e_t##, which is why it is coordinate dependent (##p## being a geometric object and as such coordinate independent).
 
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  • #79
Orodruin said:
This is somewhat disingenious.
Not at all.

Orodruin said:
Clearly u⋅p changes when you change u.
Yes, clearly. But that is not a coordinate transformation. Changing ##u## and changing coordinates are different operations.

For example, if I am driving in my car and I have some energy measuring device with me then the outcome of measuring the energy of a ball is ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## where ##p## is the four-momentum of the ball and ##u## is the four-velocity of the device.

Without changing anything physically, I can arbitrarily use coordinates where I am at rest or where the ground is at rest. Doing so changes ##p^t## but does not change ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu##.

I cannot change ##u## by a coordinate transformation. I could change ##u## by physically accelerating the measurement device or by redefining ##u## to refer to a different physical device. Both of those are different physics, not just different mathematics.

Orodruin said:
You cannot refer to energy as defined by the time component of 4-momentum without picking a reference frame just as you cannot refer to energy as defined by u⋅p without defining u.
Agreed. And defining ##u## is a different thing from defining coordinates. Both things (##p^t## and ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu##) require some specification (##t## and ##u## respectively), but they are specifying different things and those things can be changed independently.

Orodruin said:
Changing coordinates obviously changes et, which is why it is coordinate dependent (p being a geometric object and as such coordinate independent).
Yes, changing coordinates does not change the coordinate independent geometric object ##p##. Similarly, changing coordinates does not change the coordinate independent geometric object ##u## either.
 
  • #80
Dale said:
Yes, clearly. But that is not a coordinate transformation. Changing ##u## and changing coordinates are different operations.
But it is if you use the timelike tetrad vector ##e_t## instead of ##u##. The step to identify that with the 4-velocity of the corresponding coordinate frame is trivial.

Dale said:
For example, if I am driving in my car and I have some energy measuring device with me then the outcome of measuring the energy of a ball is ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## where ##p## is the four-momentum of the ball and ##u## is the four-velocity of the device.
And if you put the same measuring device on the ground ##u## is still the four-velocity of the device, but it is now at rest in the ground frame. The key point is in identifying ##u## with the timelike tetrad vector ##e_t## as already pointed out.

Dale said:
Without changing anything physically, I can arbitrarily use coordinates where I am at rest or where the ground is at rest. Doing so changes ##p^t## but does not change ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu##.
Because what that device is measuring is not the energy in the frame where you are computing things. It is measuring the energy in the rest frame of the device. If you put the device at rest in the ground frame, it will measure ##p^t##. This is as things should be.

Dale said:
I cannot change ##u## by a coordinate transformation. I could change ##u## by physically accelerating the measurement device or by redefining ##u## to refer to a different physical device. Both of those are different physics, not just different mathematics.
You are missing the point. Both of the definitions require an additional reference to another object, be it a 4-velocity or a reference frame. The two are interchangeable as a reference frame will have a 4-velocity for an object at rest in that frame. If I pick a 4-velocity ##u## that defines (up to rotations, but that is irrelevant here) a frame. Your device will then measure the energy in that frame and nothing else. Picking a different 4-velocity will select a different frame and therefore result in a different ##p^t##.

Dale said:
Agreed. Defining ##u## is a different thing from defining coordinates.
It is not though (again, up to rotations). Picking ##u## selects a particular frame (by letting ##u## be the timelike tetrad vector) - the rest frame of an object. Picking a particular frame specifies the 4-velocity of all objects at rest in that frame.

Dale said:
Both things require some specification, but they are specifying different things and those things can be changed independently.

Yes, and changing coordinates does not change the coordinate independent object ##u## either.
Of course changing coordinates does not change the 4-velocity of a different coordinate system. That would be absurd. But that is not what is being argued.
 
  • #81
Dale said:
I think failing to distinguish them is pedagogically dangerous
There are worse things than that.
 
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  • #82
Orodruin said:
But it is if you use the timelike tetrad vector et instead of u. The step to identify that with the 4-velocity of the corresponding coordinate frame is trivial.
Now that seems disingenuous to me, claiming that ##u## is a coordinate dependent object. This is disagreeing with all of MTW's statements above that some expression containing ##u## does not depend on the coordinates.

Orodruin said:
And if you put the same measuring device on the ground u is still the four-velocity of the device, but it is now at rest in the ground frame. The key point is in identifying u with the timelike tetrad vector et as already pointed out.
Putting a device on the ground is not the same as a coordinate transformation. I already covered this above where I said to you "I cannot change ##u## by a coordinate transformation. I could change ##u## by physically accelerating the measurement device or by redefining ##u## to refer to a different physical device. Both of those are different physics, not just different mathematics."

Orodruin said:
The two are interchangeable as a reference frame
Here is where we disagree. The two are not interchangeable, in my opinion. I don't see how you can both consider them interchangeable and also consider ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## to be coordinate independent. If ##u## changes with coordinates then it is not coordinate independent and it is not a tensor.

Orodruin said:
Picking u selects a particular frame
I disagree. See above regarding the device in the car which can be analyzed from the ground coordinates or from the car coordinates. Picking ##u## selects the measuring device, not the coordinates.
 
  • #83
Dale said:
Here is where we disagree. The two are not interchangeable, in my opinion. I don't see how you can both consider them interchangeable and also consider ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## to be coordinate independent. If ##u## changes with coordinates then it is not coordinate independent and it is not a tensor.

The timelike vector of a tetrad is coordinate independent. But it also singles out the time direction of a particular frame. The frame dependence of energy is explicit as the expression ##e_t \cdot p## obviously depends on the tetrad chosen.
 
  • #84
Orodruin said:
The frame dependence of energy is explicit as the expression et⋅p obviously depends on the tetrad chosen.
So do you consider ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## to be a coordinate independent or a coordinate dependent quantity?
 
  • #85
Dale said:
So do you consider ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## to be a coordinate independent or a coordinate dependent quantity?
It is coordinate independent, but so is ”the energy in the frame ##S##”. You can compute the latter in ##S## by taking ttd time component, but you don’t need to. You can just as well compute it in any other frame by the appropriate inner product with the timelike tetrad vector ##e_t## from ##S##, which is equivalent to taking the time component in ##S## - of multiplying by the 4-velocity of an observer at rest in ##S##.
 
  • #86
Orodruin said:
It is coordinate independent, but so is ”the energy in the frame ##S##”. You can compute the latter in ##S## by taking ttd time component, but you don’t need to. You can just as well compute it in any other frame by the appropriate inner product with the timelike tetrad vector ##e_t## from ##S##, which is equivalent to taking the time component in ##S## - of multiplying by the 4-velocity of an observer at rest in ##S##.
Ok, so you are making a distinction between the frame and the coordinates? With frame referring to the tetrad ##S## in the above, I assume.

That is fine. I was talking about coordinates, but I don’t object to talking about tetrads. I will use the word “tetrad” rather than “frame” to avoid confusion since sometimes people use the word “frame” to refer to coordinates.

You can only claim that the <whatever> in tetrad ##S## is independent of the coordinates if ##S## is independent of the coordinates. So the statement of mine that you objected to as “disingenuous” is correct. In fact, you agree that ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## is coordinate independent and ##p^t## is not. And the former is independent precisely because ##u##, often the timelike vector of a tetrad, is independent of the coordinates.
 
  • #87
Dale said:
So the statement of mine that you objected to as “disingenuous” is correct. In fact, you agree that ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## is coordinate independent and ##p^t## is not. And the former is independent precisely because ##u##, often the timelike vector of a tetrad, is independent of the coordinates.
No, I still consider it somewhat disingenuous. By frame above I refer to a standard Minkowski coordinate system. Such a coordinate system immediately identifies a tetrad of orthonormal basis vectors that each project out the components in those coordinates of any vector.

I agree that the value of the "energy in coordinate system ##S##" depends on what you pick for coordinate system ##S##. What I do not agree with is that this if fundamentally different from ##u\cdot p## depending on the observer you pick (and hence its 4-velocity ##u##).

Just as the "energy as seen by observer A" is frame independent, "energy in coordinate system ##S##" is frame independent as well. Both depend on what you plug in for A and ##S##, respectively.
 
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  • #88
Orodruin said:
By frame above I refer to a standard Minkowski coordinate system.
In that case I think that you are not being consistent.

Orodruin said:
the value of the "energy in coordinate system S" depends on what you pick for coordinate system S.

"energy in coordinate system S" is frame independent as well.
You say that it depends on the coordinate system, that it is frame independent, and that a frame is a coordinate system. If you have some way to make this not flat out a contradiction, then the best that could be said is that it is confusing.

Orodruin said:
What I do not agree with is that this if fundamentally different from u⋅p depending on the observer you pick (and hence its 4-velocity u).
I think it is different, and I think my approach is preferable because it doesn’t produce the apparent contradiction that yours does.

For me, this is clear and unambiguous. ##p^t## is coordinate dependent, ##g_{\mu\nu}p^\mu u^\nu## is coordinate independent. A change in coordinate system does not imply a change in ##u##, nor does a change in ##u## imply a change in coordinate system. The two are not the same (they are not even isomorphic)
 
  • #89
Dale said:
In that case I think that you are not being consistent.
There is nothing inconsistent in that. The tetrad of coordinate system ##S## of course exists also in coordinate system ##S’##. ”Energy is S” fixes the coordinate system for which you want the time component of the 4-momentum, but I can still compute that using a different coordinate system. Not by taking the time component in that coordinate system but by computing ##e_t\cdot p## in that coordinate system where ##e_t## is the timelike tetrad vector of S. It will not take the form (1,0,0,0) obviously, but I can still compute it. It will sometimes be preferable to Lorentz transforming the entire 4-momentum to S.


Dale said:
A change in coordinate system does not imply a change in u, nor does a change in u imply a change in coordinate system. The two are not the same (they are not even isomorphic)
I do not agree with this. It is clear that ##e_t\cdot p## depends on which coordinate system you use to define ##e_t##. It must as kt is ##p^t## of that coordinate system! The tetrad uniquely defines the coordinate system (up to translations and rotations, under which the energy does not change).
 
  • #90
Yuras said:
they say "No coordinates are needed to describe the fact that a specific emitter emitting a specific photon attributes to it the energy ##E_a##" without any "measured by".
You're quibbling over words. "Attributes to it" means "measured" in this context; the emitter "attributes" a specific energy to the photon that's emitted because the emitter measures it to have that energy on emission.

Yuras said:
MTW use "energy" and "energy measured by" interchangeably.
Only in contexts where it's clear who is doing the measuring, so there is no ambiguity. But just using the word "energy" without that context, as you have been claiming can be done, is meaningless.
 

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