Curve Space-time from Spinning disc?

In summary: The person in the back of the train can't see the person riding on the train because they are in a different reference frame.
  • #36
lucas_ said:
Because Michio Kaku article in Einstein 100 year anniversary is one of the most powerful articles about relativity written...
In the 24 hours that this thread about Kaku has been running, you could have worked your way well into the first chapter of “Spacetime Physics” by Taylor and Wheeler. It’s the difference between looking at a photograph of a delicious meal in a cooking magazine and experiencing the real thing by sitting down and eating it.
 
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  • #37
lucas_ said:
About Michio statement "If space and time become distorted, then everything you measure with meters and clocks also becomes distorted, including all forms of mass and energy", it may have a iota of truth in it?

Not really. Consider the current SI definitions of the meter and second: the second is defined in terms of a particular hyperfine transition in cesium, and the meter is defined in order to make the speed of light exactly 299,792,458 meters per second. So meters and seconds are defined in terms of a physical process that can be measured anywhere. Since that process defines what meters and seconds are, it doesn't even make sense to ask whether meters and seconds can become distorted.

More generally, suppose you are on Earth and I am in some galaxy a billion light-years away. How could we possibly compare our meters and seconds to see whether they were the same? There is no invariant way of doing that. The only thing we can do is to define our meters and seconds in terms of the same physical process, as SI units do.
 
  • #38
lucas_ said:
LET GR

There is no such thing. LET was never extended to cover curved spacetime the way standard Special Relativity was extended to General Relativity.
 
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  • #39
PeterDonis said:
There is no such thing. LET was never extended to cover curved spacetime the way standard Special Relativity was extended to General Relativity.

Going to your statement: "
First, a key distinction: the article discusses curved space, but space is not the same as spacetime, and the curvature of the "space" of a spinning disk has nothing whatever to do with spacetime curvature. Spacetime in the case of the spinning disk is flat."

But what would happen if the spinning disc is rotating near the speed of light (in convensional SR). Won't the inner rim be more length contracted? What would happen to the spinning wheel when seen at its plane. Won't it create folds in the wheel?
 
  • #40
lucas_ said:
what would happen if the spinning disc is rotating near the speed of light.

It wouldn't change anything I said.
 
  • #41
PeterDonis said:
It wouldn't change anything I said.

But is not a muon is length contracted and time dilated or any object is length contracted or time dilated when moving near the speed of light. So just want to analyze it in terms of spinning disc at speed of light. Nothing would be length contracted or time dilated? why doesn't it apply to spinning wheel rotating near the speed of light?
 
  • #42
lucas_ said:
is not a muon is length contracted and time dilated or any object is length contracted or time dilated when moving near the speed of light. So just want to analyze it in terms of spinning disc at speed of light. Nothing would be length contracted or time dilated? why doesn't it apply to spinning wheel rotating near the speed of light?

I didn't say anything about any of this being wrong. All I said was that spacetime is flat for the spinning disc. That's true regardless of how fast it is spinning. The disc itself being length contracted does not mean spacetime isn't flat; length contraction and time dilation occur in SR, i.e., in flat spacetime.
 
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  • #43
Adding to the above. Remember in LHC, the particle has time dilation when it spins around the accelerator.. so imagine million of particles (different accelerators) with different radius of particle accelerator superimposed.. each particle would encounter different time dilation and length contraction?
 
  • #44
PeterDonis said:
I didn't say anything about any of this being wrong. All I said was that spacetime is flat for the spinning disc. That's true regardless of how fast it is spinning. The disc itself being length contracted does not mean spacetime isn't flat; length contraction and time dilation occur in SR, i.e., in flat spacetime.

Oh. Ok. I'd give it a thought experiment.

Btw. Einstein first thought experiment was racing to go head to head with light. And he couldn't imagine a frozen wave. What principle violated a frozen wave in the first place? Why didn't he just adjust the concept like how Planck had to invent quanta to solve the ultraviolet catastrophe?
 
  • #45
@lucas_ if you want to go into how the spinning disc is actually analyzed in relativity, I suggest looking up the Ehrenfest paradox and Born coordinates. The Wikipedia articles on these topics give a reasonable starting point:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ehrenfest_paradox
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Born_coordinates
There are a lot of complexities lurking here, which require more than a "B" level background. So if you want to discuss this after taking some time to read up, you should start a new thread at the "I" level, not the "B" level. Such discussion is off topic for this thread since we're only talking about the fact that spacetime is flat for this scenario.
 
  • #46
lucas_ said:
What principle violated a frozen wave in the first place?

The fact that there is no solution of Maxwell's Equations that describes an electromagnetic wave in free space that varies only in space, not time.
 
  • #47
PeterDonis said:
Second, the "space" of the spinning disk isn't even a 3-dimensional spatial "slice" cut out of 4-dimensional spacetime. It's an abstract "space" that you get by performing a particular mathematical operation (the technical term is "quotient space"), and doesn't correspond to any actual 3-dimensional space at all.
The "quotient space" corresponds to the non-Euclidean geometry that one would actually measure by placing rulers on the disc or walking along it with an odometer. So it's not that abstract, but raher quite practical.
 
  • #48
A.T. said:
The "quotient space" corresponds to the non-Euclidean geometry that one would actually measure by placing rulers on the disc or walking along it with an odometer.

More precisely, it's the non-Euclidean geometry you get if you make local distance measurements and then put them together into a global 3-dimensional space. But as I said before, this space does not correspond to any actual 3-dimensional spacelike slice of the 4-dimensional Minkowski spacetime.

The complexities lurking here were discussed in detail in this previous thread from 2014:

https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/the-rotating-disk-of-Albert-einstein.740158/
 
  • #50
lucas_ said:
Adding to the above. Remember in LHC, the particle has time dilation when it spins around the accelerator.. so imagine million of particles (different accelerators) with different radius of particle accelerator superimposed.. each particle would encounter different time dilation and length contraction?
None of the particles encounter any time dilation or length contraction; as far as each particle is concerned, time passes at one second per second.

An observer at rest relative to anyone of these particles (and therefore moving rapidly relative to the surface of the earth) will find that clocks on the surface of the Earth are running slow relative to their own clock, just as an observer on the surface of the Earth will find that a clock at rest relative to the particle is running slow.
 
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