How Does Einstein's Theory Affect the Age of Light?

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SUMMARY

Einstein's theory of relativity establishes that time dilation occurs as an object approaches the speed of light, affecting the perception of time for both the observer and the moving object. Light itself does not experience time, making discussions about its aging irrelevant. The muon decay experiment serves as a practical demonstration of time dilation, showing that while muons decay slower when moving at high speeds, they appear to live longer from the perspective of a stationary observer. The concept of reference frames is crucial, as all observers measure the speed of light as constant, regardless of their own motion.

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  • Understanding of Einstein's theory of relativity
  • Familiarity with time dilation concepts
  • Knowledge of reference frames in physics
  • Basic comprehension of the muon decay experiment
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  • Study the implications of the gamma factor in relativity, specifically the equation ##\gamma = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1- v^2/c^2}}##.
  • Explore the muon decay experiment in detail to understand its significance in demonstrating time dilation.
  • Investigate the concept of light years and its relevance to the speed of light and time perception.
  • Examine the philosophical implications of relativity and how it challenges traditional notions of absolute motion.
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Students of physics, educators in relativity, and anyone interested in the fundamental principles of time and motion in the universe.

  • #61
Vitro said:
You don't have the same t in both directions.
Of course! So to the platform observer, the total distance traveled is c*(t1+t2) = 2d+v*(t1-t2). So to the observer on the train, the clock is asymmetric?
 
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  • #62
Drakkith said:
Nope. All the observers are stationary with respect to the platform and will see the train moving by at the same velocity.
Thank you. Of course the difference is the motion of the train, causing the time dilation, whereas the observers on the platform are stationary relative to the platform, and therefore for them time does not dilate.
 
  • #63
Francis Ward said:
So to the observer on the train, the clock is asymmetric?
No, to the observer on the train the clock is symmetric, the light pulse takes the same time in both directions. The simplified time dilation formula works for the total round trip time but not for the individual legs, you need to apply the full Lorentz transformation for those.
 
  • #64
Francis Ward said:
Thank you. Of course the difference is the motion of the train, causing the time dilation, whereas the observers on the platform are stationary relative to the platform, and therefore for them time does not dilate.
... And their clocks are synchronized, so combining all the reports taken at some given time is a valid procedure for finding what was happening at that time (using their common rest frame to define "at the same time").
 
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  • #65
Early in another current thread, I posted some images and applications of the "longitudinal light clock", where the light rays are spatially parallel to the separation of the light-clock mirrors.https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/twin-paradox-help.884180/#post-5558653
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/twin-paradox-help.884180/page-2#post-5564060

https://www.geogebra.org/m/HYD7hB9v#
material-3974473-thumb.png


For a fuller development,
look at my recent insights
https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/spacetime-diagrams-light-clocks/
https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/relativity-rotated-graph-paper/
 
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  • #66
Let me agree that Light or photon cannot be observer as it perhaps not have a collection of measuring rods and clocks and may be signalling facility. But that muon does not also have. When we talk about muon distance and muon time we take it as what we will measure if we sit on the muon. There is no way to find out the life time of a muon at rest but we take that equal to the life time of muon when it has been retarded enough. Also in all the replies above the distance contraction has not been taken into account. In my opinion they are related phenomena and not independent and the constant parameter the speed of light connects them. In muon's frame muon lives shorter but has a smaller distance to travel to Earth and in our frame muon has a longer time to travel the distance we measure. My last submission or counter question is that can we say time is dilated for photon and space is contracted so that it is everywhere at the same time.
 
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  • #67
Let'sthink said:
can we say time is dilated for photon and space is contracted so that it is everywhere at the same time.
No, and you even explained why yourself: "When we talk about muon distance and muon time we take it as what we will measure if we sit on the muon". That doesn't work for a flash of light because we can't ride along with it - we'd be moving at the speed of light and that's not possible.
 
  • #68
Thank you, Nugatory. But you have not reacted on the dependence of time dilation and length contraction. Also does it mean that photon does not exist in the space-time we exist in. Then where does it exist? Could you also elaborate on the difference between photon which you call flash of light?
 
  • #69
Let'sthink said:
Thank you, Nugatory. But you have not reacted on the dependence of time dilation and length contraction.
It's been touched on in a number of posts earlier in this thread. It's not needed to analyze the crossways-to-motion light clock, but it is needed for the parallel-to-motion case - so we usually work with first one just because it's easier to analyze.
Also does it mean that photon does not exist in the space-time we exist in. Then where does it exist?
It does not mean any such thing. If I, watching something, can say that it is at a given place at a given time, then that something exists in spacetime - that's what spacetime is. Saying that a flash of light is reflected off a mirror here, travels through space, and reaches another mirror over there a moment later is no different than saying that a ball bounces off the floor and reaches my hand a moment later. It's true that nothing can keep up with the flash of light except another flash of light, but that doesn't mean it doesn't exist in spacetime, it means that it is moving through spacetime faster than anything else.
Could you also elaborate on the difference between photon which you call flash of light?
We have an entire thread and many more discussions on this topic over in the quantum physics section; you'll want to find some of those threads.

For now, suffice to say that a photon is not a little object that moves through space at the speed of light and a beam of light is not a stream of photons moving by the way a river is a stream of water molecules moving by. Einstein developed relativity using the classical definition of light as electromagnetic waves propagating at speed ##c##, and that still works today. Photons only come into the picture when quantum mechanics is involved.
 
  • #70
Thanks once again, Nugatory, for your point-wise replies! But you have not committed anything on my assertion that time dilation and length contraction are dependent on each other. Hope I will be able to read and understand the references you are providing. But am I right if I think that all this confusion is there because the marriage between theory of relativity, which is basically classical and quantum mechanics, (which takes birth from the womb of classical mechanics, has some extraordinary non-classical postulates;) is not yet complete and one day we may be able to prove that it is not possible also? Kindly excuse my flowery and may be incorrect diction!
 
  • #71
Let'sthink said:
But you have not committed anything on my assertion that time dilation and length contraction are dependent on each other.

They aren't dependent on each other, they both are the result of the fact that light travels at the same speed for all inertial observers. I wish I could go into detail about this, but I confess I do not know the details! o_O

Let'sthink said:
But am I right if I think that all this confusion is there because the marriage between theory of relativity, which is basically classical and quantum mechanics, (which takes birth from the womb of classical mechanics, has some extraordinary non-classical postulates;) is not yet complete

Nope. Relativity is a classical (non-quantum) theory. Nothing in this thread has anything to do with quantum physics.
 
  • #72
How do you say that , Drakkith, photon is name given to the particle associated with electromagnetic waves/field hence quantum physics has to be very much in as was also hinted in Nugatory's response?

Also I do not buy that argument of introducing a parameter c (length/time) and assume that that makes the two effects independent. Rather Relativity broke the myth that time is absolute!
 
  • #73
Let'sthink said:
But you have not committed anything on my assertion that time dilation and length contraction are dependent on each other.
It's not so much that they are dependent on one another as that they're both manifestations of the same underlying fact, namely that the speed of light is the same for all inertial observers. But yes, you need both (along with the relativity of simultaneity, which in some ways is more fundamental than the other two) to construct an internally consistent theory with a constant speed of light.

But am I right if I think that all this confusion is there because the marriage between theory of relativity, which is basically classical and quantum mechanics, (which takes birth from the womb of classical mechanics, has some extraordinary non-classical postulates;) is not yet complete
That marriage was successfully consummated about 75 years ago, with the discovery of quantum field theory. Unfortunately, QFT charges a much higher mathematical price of admission than either special relativity or non-relativistic QM; it's not generally considered an undergraduate-level topic.
 
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  • #74
Let'sthink said:
How do you say that , Drakkith, photon is name given to the particle associated with electromagnetic waves/field hence quantum physics has to be very much in as was also hinted in Nugatory's response?

While its true that photons are the quanta of the EM field, relativity treats light as a classical wave, not as photons. As I said before, quantum physics has nothing to do with anything in this thread. (In other words, the theory of relativity works just fine whether you treat light as a classical wave or as a quantum object)
 
  • #75
Thank you very much Nugatory, I cannot ask a question or comment anything in a field where I am not admitted. But I am sure the total story of space time mass and energy is not yet completely written or written off!
 
  • #76
I am (almost) completely serious when I say that the best thing you can do is to try to forget that you ever heard the word "photon" until after you have learned special relativity and are starting in on quantum mechanics. Einstein figured out special relativity without photons, and you can too.

But if you aren't going to take this advice... Take a look at the papers referenced in the first two posts of this thread: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/what-is-a-photon.879128/
 
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  • #77
I welcome your zeal of replying, Nugatory! When I accept your first advice, the first thread of this discussion loses its place.
I shall follow your second advice and then come back to you with my confusions!
 
  • #78
I have read one of the articles you, Nugatory, referred to and and am able to appreciate that photon is quite different from any other particle. I am in the superposition state of clarified and confused ones and will take quite some time for wording a clear question. Thank you for all your answers! But I do not understand what is the great idea in letting the ug student treat photon as he wants and also answer his questions as per his understanding in a round about manner and ultimately let him know at pg level that photon is no particle at all. But that is just observation and not a question!
 
  • #79
Let'sthink said:
But I do not understand what is the great idea in letting the ug student treat photon as he wants and also answer his questions as per his understanding in a round about manner and ultimately let him know at pg level that photon is no particle at all. But that is just observation and not a question!

In a perfect world every student would be taught things in the clearest manner, the best order, by the best teachers, and with the best source material. Unfortunately perfection is in a superposition of "doesn't compute" and "pipe dream".
 
  • #80
Thank you Drakkith for your reply and for using similar diction!
 
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  • #81
Let'sthink said:
But I do not understand what is the great idea in letting the ug student treat photon as he wants and also answer his questions as per his understanding in a round about manner and ultimately let him know at pg level that photon is no particle at all. But that is just observation and not a question!

The relevant issue here is the meaning of the word "particle". In the classical particle model, it's simply something so small that its size can be ignored when compared to all other relevant distances involved. So a traffic engineer can model a car as a particle, but an auto mechanic cannot. When calculating a home run distance a baseball can be modeled as a particle, but a major league pitcher cannot use that model when executing his pitches.

In quantum mechanics the word "particle" means an entirely different thing. A photon is just such a particle, as is an electron. If you've ever taken a chemistry class you run into the seemingly senseless warnings about not thinking of an atomic electron as you would think of a planet orbiting its sun. The planet can in that case be modeled as a classical particle, but the electron cannot.

If you read an article written by a physicist like N. David Mermin you see that he speaks of photons bouncing off mirrors and traveling the length of a train car as he derives a formula for the relativistic addition of velocities. But he is a physicist, so he can get away with it! He knows the difference between a classical particle and a quantum particle. For someone who doesn't that practice can lead to all sorts of misconceptions.
 
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  • #82
When I was a ug student I used to think em waves or Planck's photon as pure energy. Classically whenever we talk of energy it is of the particles only whether with classical particles or classical waves. For waves also because in the classical domain energy of the wave is ultimately the energy of the particles of the medium. In case of light and after advent of relativity we find there is no necessity of a medium. But em waves have energy. So these waves must be particles in the guise of waves. Also these so called particles are strange they cannot be retarded and hence can never come to rest and we have to presume their rest mass as zero. For other particles the contribution to energy comes both from mass and motion but in case of photons it is all motion. The discussion on this thread has broadened my idea of photon and now I think I can think it as a purely QFT object whose energy, direction and plorization can only be conceived and position is just indeterminate or un-conceivable naturally it follows it cannot have a conceivable velocity at a given time.
 
  • #83
Let'sthink said:
we have to presume their rest mass as zero.
"Presume"? Try following the references here.
 
  • #84
Thank you George Dishman, I went through some references suggested by you some par in detail and others not in so much detail. It was a very fruitful and useful exercise for me.
 
  • #85
Francis Ward said:
Light, we are told, cannot be influenced by the speed of it's source (we cannot add to the speed of light by putting the torch on the front of the train). Hence it should not be influenced either by the sideways motion of the train.
To be clear, the light will be affected - but not it's speed. Suppose we have a high speed train passing a stationary train on a side track. And we have two stationary photon detectors positioned in front of the trains - each measuring photons from one train. We look at the light from each just as it passes. Photons from each train arrive at the detectors at the same time, but the detector watching the moving train will see heavier, bluer photons.
 
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