cfrogue
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You are good.JesseM said:What does "expanding space" mean? Is this just a vague poetic description, or something that can be defined in a precise mathematical way?
I mean that the posted paper shows the nature of SR's acceleration that the accelerating frame sees an expanding metric in the direction of acceleration when compared to the instantaneous rest frame. It did not matter that there were two ships. Equation 4 shows the metric expansion within the frame. Then, once this v compare to the instantaneous subsides, ie the acceleration stops, the metric reduces to just d since the v is 0 in equation 4.
Furthermore, the launch frame sees a constant distance during the acceleration. However, once the acceleration stops, LT length contraction applies since the SR acceleration equations for the launch frame no longer apply once acceleration stops.
JesseM said:What does it mean to see a constant metric? Certainly the spacetime metric is the same in all frames, and in relativity the spacetime metric is the fundamental one. I suppose you can talk about a spatial metric in any given coordinate system, but what does it mean to say it's expanding? Are you just saying that the distance between the rockets expands? But of course even in classical Newtonian mechanics the distance between rockets will expand if they have different coordinate accelerations, yet in this situation I doubt you would talk about an "expanding metric". Do you have any exact definition for this phrase?
The metric I describe is only the one in the frame.
I think this is now a required term since the accelerating frame sees its meter stick expand since the speed of light is constant.
What other choice do you have?
Have you seen anything in the literature to describe this phenomena?