-=Red=- said:
Lets say that i had a "beam rifle". This rifle is equipped with a high magnification optical scope. Now i aim this rifle at someone standing 20 light seconds away and pull the trigger. Will the person be able to walk out of the way of that beam of light before he/she is hit with it? According to russ_watters from the photons point of view it reaches the person instantly and therefore the person will not be able to move out of the way from the time the trigger is pulled.
russ_watters was being a bit misleading, a photon does not literally have its own inertial frame to define its own "point of view", see bcrowell's post. You might also take a look at
this previous thread on the subject, where in
post #21 I pointed out that the closest you can come is to think about what a fast-moving observer sees in the
limit as his speed relative to the rest of the world
approaches the speed of light. If we imagine your rifle fires a bullet at a speed very close to the speed of light, then it's true that in the bullet's own frame, the distance between you and the person you're firing at is shrunk down to
almost zero because of the
length contraction effect. It's also true that because of the
time dilation effect, in the bullet's frame both your clock and the clock of the guy you're firing at are running very slow,
almost stopped (these effects are reciprocal, so in your frame a clock traveling along with the bullet would be almost stopped too, and the length of the bullet would be contracted to nearly zero in the bullet's direction of motion). However, one other effect to keep in mind is the
relativity of simultaneity (see
this article as well), which says that if two events happened "simultaneously" in one frame (both events have the same time-coordinate in that frame), they did
not happen simultaneously in another frame. So, suppose in your frame your clock and the clock of the guy you're firing at are synchronized, and you fire when your clock reads t=0, so in your frame the event of your firing is simultaneous with the event of the other guy's clock also reading t=0 seconds. If the bullet is traveling very close to the speed of light, then in the frame where you and the other guy are at rest it will take just over 20 seconds for the bullet to reach his position, so even if he waits until t=19 seconds on his clock to step aside, he can avoid being hit. But in the frame of the bullet, the event of the bullet being fired from your gun is
not simultaneous with the event of the other guy's clock reading t=0 seconds, instead it is simultaneous with the other guy's clock reading just a tiny bit less than 20 seconds! So in the bullet's frame, the other guy has
already stepped aside at the moment the bullet is being fired, thus even though it takes close to zero time to reach the position that guy was formerly standing, the guy isn't standing there any more so the bullet won't hit him.