johann1301 said:
What if the light sources are no longer attached to the train, but attached to the train station. Let's imagine that the train passes the two lights in such a way that they both are triggered to flash when one of the lights is in front of me, and one behind me, both equally distanced from me. Will i then see the light in front of the train first?
As long as you can actually trigger the two light sources to flash when they are equally distanced from you, according to your rest frame, then you will see both flashes at the same time. But this raises the question of how you can get this to happen.
The challenge is that the specification of when and where they flash is according to your rest frame but the light sources are at rest according to the train station's rest frame. There are many ways to implement such a scenario but I'm going to suggest one that I think is the simplest.
Let's imagine two probes at either end of the train that can trigger the two light sources that are some distance apart along the track in front of the train station. One probe is mounted higher than the other so that each probe can only trigger one light source. Then the only issue is how far apart are the two light sources? A naive approach might be to put them as far apart as the Proper Length of the train (the length of the train in its own rest frame). Let's assume the Proper Length of the train is 6000 feet and is traveling to the left in front of the train station at 30%c. Here is a spacetime diagram depicting the rest frame of the two light sources shown as the thick green lines placed 6000 feet apart:
The ends of the train are shown in black. When the probe at the trailing end of the train reaches the light source on the right, it triggers the light flash shown as the thin green line propagating upwards and to the left. When the probe at the leading end of the train reaches the light source on the left, it triggers the light flash shown as the thin green line propagating upwards and to the right. You are shown in blue. The two thin green light flashes do not arrive at you at the same time and if we transform to the train's rest frame, we can see why:
The reason is, of course, that the distance between the light sources is contracted and so they are not triggered at the same time in the train's rest frame but we can easily fix this by moving them further apart as shown here:
Now the question is: How far apart must the light sources be in their own rest frame? And the answer is: Gamma (1.048 at 30%c) times the Proper Length of the train as shown here:
So as long as the train station knows the speed and Proper Length of the approaching train, it can place the light sources the correct distance apart so that you will eventually see both flashes at the same time.
johann1301 said:
I think the question boils down to: Does the velocity of the light sources matter?
In this scenario, it matters in the sense that the train station must know ahead of time what the velocity of the train will be when it gets to the light sources but as long as this information is established correctly, the same scenario will work at any velocity.