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Physics
Special and General Relativity
Clock Thought Exp: A Light-Year Time Paradox
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[QUOTE="ZawL, post: 5464553, member: 593042"] This is a thought experiment I came up with this evening. It must surely have been considered before but I couldn't find any reference and I've come up with it independently. NASA has positioned a clock in Earth's thermosphere that can be viewed from outer space with a powerful enough telescope and activates it just as the time hits New Year's on 1 Jan 2020. Aliens live on planet XYZ one light year away from earth. They have been monitoring Earth for a while and notice the clock as soon as it is activated. They send a being in a spaceship towards Earth at close to the speed of light. The being constantly watches the clock as he approaches Earth (except when rotation of Earth means the clock isn't visible to him). Since the light from the clock takes one year to reach planet XYZ, the aliens first notice the clock when it is 1 Jan 2021 on Earth, although they will see the time on the clock as 1 Jan 2020 on XYZ. The alien traveling towards the Earth will take 1 year to reach it, so when he arrives to Earth, the clock will show 1 Jan 2022. He has been watching the clock go from 1 Jan 2020 to 1 Jan 2022 in the year it takes him to reach Earth from the moment he first saw the time on the clock. My questions are, how does he observe two years' worth of clock ticks in the space of 1 year, and does he perceive the clock ticking as we do on Earth, ie one second in the space of one second? [/QUOTE]
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Physics
Special and General Relativity
Clock Thought Exp: A Light-Year Time Paradox
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