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Am I going to absorb 4 years of light data from Alpha Centauri or is it just going massively blueshift?
The discussion centers on the implications of traveling to Alpha Centauri in one week using a hypothetical spacecraft. Participants clarify that while the spacecraft would experience a journey of one week, the light signals received would span eight years, accounting for both the time light takes to travel and the spacecraft's acceleration. A sustained acceleration of 411 g is calculated for the journey, raising questions about kinetic time dilation and the nature of light frequency shifts, specifically blue-shifting. The conversation also touches on the effects of gravitational forces on time perception and the anomalies observed in spacecraft like Voyager and Pioneer.
PREREQUISITESAstronomers, physicists, aerospace engineers, and anyone interested in the theoretical aspects of space travel and relativistic physics.
Relative to what? The gravitational force between the voyager probes and sun (and voyager probes and planets and everything else in the inner solar system) is lower than it was in the past.Isn't it true that the voyager probe feels less force from relative accelerations
What?This tells me that time is kind of more like constant
What?but the forces in nature like gravity and the energy from our sun create little time-warp-zones that bind the action within them.
?Or to paraphrase, lightwaves are the fluid of time.
This is true, and it is already taken into account. You have to do the same for exoplanet searches and even position measurements of stars.Pulsars pulse at atomic clock precision, shouldn't there be a slight oscillation in pulse rate over the course of a year based on the rotation of the Earth depending on if we're swinging towards the star or away from the star?
No, this would violate General Relativity.Basically it would take more acceleration in deep space to feel "1 G force".
Please provide a source for this claim.These are test results returned from the Voyager probe.
I don't know the numbers, but I assume it's something like 10.1m/s^2 or more acceleration to feel a G
DaleSpam said:EDIT: actually, I just did the numbers. That is a sustained acceleration of 411 g for 1 week, and that is assuming that you don't want to stop at Alpha Centauri, just fly by at a shade under c.
Sorry, that can't be right. 1 week on Earth's clocks -> less than 1 week on an on-board clock.mfb said:[..] If you take a clock with you in the spaceship, you will get a different value (4 years + 1 week). [..]
Ah yes of course! (I have not been drinking... could this be due to lack of sleep?mfb said:The "1 week" is the on-board clock and corresponds to 4 years on Earth (and the rest frame of alpha centauri). The 4 years correspond to the 4 years before where the spaceship was at rest on earth.
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