Are Time and Space Independent of Objects?

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Discussion Overview

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.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning
  • Experimental/applied

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that statements about time and space are ultimately reducible to measurements of distance and duration related to objects.
  • There is a question about whether the space-time distortion experienced by moving objects is felt only by those objects or if it extends to the surrounding local space-time.
  • One participant proposes that if time slows down for a moving object, it raises the question of whether time is independent of the object or a property of the object.
  • Another participant emphasizes the necessity of using two synchronized clocks to define time dilation and questions how different interpretations of time distortion might affect measurable quantities.
  • A proposed experiment involves three identical clocks to test synchronization after a moving clock passes a stationary clock, with participants discussing the implications of special and general relativity on the results.
  • Some participants note that special relativity predicts synchronization between clocks under certain conditions, while general relativity introduces complications due to gravitational effects.
  • There is acknowledgment that the interpretation of experimental predictions may vary among participants.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

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.

Contextual Notes

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
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Are time and space independent of an object, or are they properties of an object?
 
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What do you mean physically. In other words, what kind of experiment could you perform to distinguish the two options?
 
Statements about time and space are just statements about measurements of distance and duration, and measurements of distance and duration are reducible to observations of objects.
 
There is a space-time distortion felt by objects in motion...but is this effect felt only by the objects in motion or is this distortion extended to local space-time?
 
Again, what would that look like physically? How would you experimentally tell if the distortion was "felt only by the objects" or "extended to local space-time"?

The reason I ask is because if there is no experiment you can use to determine it then you are asking a philosophical question rather than a physics question. Not that there is anything wrong with philosophical questions, but just to realize that they are different from scientific questions.
 
If time is slowing down for an object traveling at high speeds, and if this is only felt by the moving object, 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)?
 
Gear300 said:
If time is slowing down for an object traveling at high speeds, and if this is only felt by the moving object,...

You have to clearly say what you want to measure. For example: You have to identical clocks going at the same rate when placed side by side at rest to the observer. When one clock is moving relative to the observer it is measured by the observer to tick slower than the clock at rest to the observer.

You always need two clocks to define time dilation.

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)?

Does this interpretation change any measurable quantities? If not: pick the one you like more. Physics doesn't care. My favorite is that the clock advancing in space, advances less in time.
 
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?
 
Last edited:
Nice post DaleSpam :smile:
 
  • #10
In special relativity, you can move objects around without changing the properties of spacetime (metric). So different positions of objects correspond to the same spacetime.

In general relativity, different positions of objects correspond to different spacetimes.

In both cases, the properties of spacetime are inferred by using objects.
 
  • #11
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?

Yes...you have it more or less on the spot...but, based on the other posts, I'm assuming this is left to little more than interpretation?
 
  • #12
In the experiment DaleSpam came up with, special relativity predicts that the rest clock and the reference clock would still be synchronized after the moving clock departs.

That entails ignoring gravity, of course, since special relativity doesn't deal with gravity. If you take into account the gravitational forces that the clocks exert on each other, then general relativity predicts that the rest clock and the reference clock would not quite be synchronized. The rest clock would be slightly behind the reference clock due to gravitational time dilation. But that would occur even if the moving clock were sitting still - it's due to the moving clock's mass, not its motion.
 
  • #13
Relativity makes definite predictions about this experiment, how you choose to interpret the prediction is up to you. Provided there is no significant gravitation, the rest clock and the reference clock remain synchronized. If the moving clock is attached to a gravitating mass then the clocks will not remain synchronized.

EDIT: I see that diazona was quicker :smile:
 
  • #14
I see...Thanks for the replies.
 

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