Gear300
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Are time and space independent of an object, or are they properties of an object?
The discussion centers on whether time and space are independent of objects or if they are properties of objects. Participants explore the implications of this question through theoretical and experimental lenses, considering concepts from both special and general relativity.
Participants express multiple competing views regarding the nature of time and space, with no consensus reached on whether they are independent or properties of objects. The discussion remains unresolved as participants explore different interpretations and implications.
The discussion includes assumptions about the nature of time and space, the role of gravity in time dilation, and the interpretation of experimental results, which are not fully resolved.
Gear300 said:If time is slowing down for an object traveling at high speeds, and if this is only felt by the moving object,...
Gear300 said:then how would we interpret the situation: would it be that the object is distorting time (time is independent of the object), or is the object's time distorting (time is a property of the object)?
DaleSpam said:Hi Gear300, let me try and guess what I think you are asking and propose an experiment to measure it. If that is not what you are asking then maybe you can refine or correct the experiment:
Consider 3 identical ideal clocks: the reference clock, the rest clock, and the moving clock. The reference clock and the rest clock are far away from each other, at rest wrt each other, and synchronized via the standard Einstein synchronization procedure. The moving clock is moving inertially at relativistic speeds and passes the rest clock as close as possible without colliding (never coming close to the reference clock). After the moving clock departs, are the rest clock and the reference clock still synchronized?
Is that what you were getting at? If not, can you propose a different experiment?