Chrisc said:
The principle of relativity removes the property absolute rest from the laws of mechanics. If M and B have a relative speed of 0.75c, neither can say they are at rest or in motion. Such a claim by either would be a nonsensical statement without an absolute frame of rest from which to make a measurement. The property rest is then a relative measure. If the equations of mechanics are upheld in a frame, the coordinates of the frame hold the property rest. This is the key, the frame is not at rest in the classical sense, the frame holds the property rest with respect to the equations of mechanics being upheld in (accurately predicting) the measured motion (mechanics) of bodies.
To say a frame is at rest or in constant linear motion is nonsensical except with respect to another frame. There is no test of mechanics that will distinguish rest from constant linear motion, because there "is" no such distinction.
It seems that you have got problems to understand the relativity principle and the definition of reference frames. Of course the observer in M can say he's at rest an B is in motion; and also B can say he's at rest and M is in motion. And because both can say this, the relativity principle is fulfilled. This is as true for the
Galilei-transformation (without electrodynamics) as it is true for the Lorentz-transformation. So, when we say A or B or M are at rest, we mean that we measure those conditions with instruments (rods and clocks) which are at rest in specific inertial reference frames. So let us discuss your example more precisely:
I am in the frame M speeding toward B at 0.75c. A is also speeding toward M in the same direction at 0.75c and therefore speeding toward B at 1.5c. But B does not measure the speed of A to be 1.5c, since B's measurements are contracted and time is dilated with respect to M, B will always measure the speed of A to be less than c.
If your scratching your head because I said M was speeding toward B, but then I attributed the contraction and dilation to the measurements made by B, you will see my point.
How does M, between A and B, both speeding toward M at 0.75c, reason and predict the measurement of the speed of A as made by B will be less that c due to the contraction and dilation suffered at B, when the same reasoning would require the contraction and dilation should have been suffered at M and not B in the previous example?
If you're thinking it is simply a matter of relative motion, you are stating my original question. Why does M not prime the measurement of the speed of B with the Lorentz transformation before considering the speed of A as measured by B?
To define the inertial reference frames, let us state: A is resting in M1; B is resting in M2; C is resting in M3.
a) Using rods and clocks which are at rest in
M3 we measure that the speed of C is 0c, that the speed of A is -0.75c, and that the speed of B is 0.75c. Therefore in M3 the relative speed between A and B is 1.5c. (Of course, 1.5c is not a signal velocity and therefore there is no violation of special relativity).
b) Using rods and clocks which are at rest in
M1 we measure that the speed of C is 0.75c, that the speed of A is 0c, and that the speed of B (using relativistic velocity addition) is 0.96c. Therefore in M1 the relative speed between A and B is 0.96c.
c) Using rods and clocks which are at rest in
M2 we measure that that the speed of C is -0.75c, that the speed of A (using relativistic velocity addition) is -0.96c, and that the speed of B is 0c. Therefore in M2 the relative speed between A and B is 0.96c.
That's all.