Chris Miller said:
Great forum! Your answers have really helped clear up some of my thinking.
Janus: Your thoughtful remarks have raised further questions.
I understand that, "As you are passing the Earth [i.e., on my way toward the star], you and the Earth are both seeing light that left that star at the same time." But by my dilated time, wouldn't it be only about 8 minutes old?
As far as you are concerned, you are not time dilated, everything else is moving at close to c with respect to you and it time dilated.
"The light you saw from the star is now traveling away from you and back to the star at c."
How is the light from the star now traveling (reflected?) back to the star?
You misunderstood. I'm not talking about light being reflected back to the star, I'm asking you to start at the moment you pass the Earth and mentally run time backwards from that moment. You are in essence back-tracking the light and the star to the moment the light you see at the moment you pass the Earth left the star. It's like this. You have two friends that left the same gas station at the same time on their way to you. One is driving at 60 mph and the other at 50. At the moment the first friend arrives, you get a call from the second one saying he is five miles away. How far away is the gas station that they left? The answer (30 miles), is he same whether you run events forward from when they left the gas station or if you run them backwards from the moment one friend arrives and you get the call.
"The star will actually visually appear much much smaller to you than it does to the Earth."
So, if I could instantaneously accelerate to 0.999999999875c from Earth toward the sun, the sun would appear smaller than if it were 100 light years away from Earth's vantage? At what v would this hold true when I was only 1 km from the sun? Blows my mind a little.
It's best not to bring acceleration into a discussion of Relativity until you are
really comfortable with it under uniform velocity conditions, as it opens a whole new can of worms. But you can think of it like this. Imagine sitting in a parked car during a snowfall. The snow is falling straight down, so the snow falling on the car is coming from directly over head. Now start driving, The same snow now appears to be coming from somewhere ahead of the car at an angle, the faster you drive the closer this angle becomes to being horizontal. You get the same effect with light. Light that would appear to come from a point 45 degrees from directly in front of you if you are at rest with respect to the source, will come at you from a narrower angle if you are moving towards the source, the greater your speed, the narrower the angle. It is caller the aberration of light.
"At that relative velocity, even radio waves from the star would be shifted into gamma ray part of the spectrum."
Very interesting. Is this because of length foreshortening? If so, wouldn't they revert to their original wavelengths after entering my frame of reference?
It is Doppler shift. And while there are Relativistic effects that contribute to the exact degree of the shift, it can be basically explained as due to a decrease in propagation delay as the distance between you and the source decreases. Imagine a peak of an electromagnetic wave emitted by a source 10 light sec away and moving at .5c towards you. The peak will take 10 sec to reach you. The source is emitting a 1 hz wave, so 1 sec later it emits the next peak. By this time its has moved 0.5 light seconds closer to you, and takes 9.5 sec to reach you. Since it was emitted 1 sec after the first peak was, it reaches you 1+9.5 =10.5 secs after the first peak was emitted, this means you will only see a 10.5-10 = 0.5 sec time difference between the arrival of the peaks of the successive waves. The waves arrive at a higher frequency for you than emitted at the source.
Of course in this example I didn't account for Relativity. When you do, the answer comes out to 1.732 times the source frequency and not 2 times.