Light Clock Animation App: Find, Start & Feedback

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on a Javascript/HTML5 application designed to simulate a Light Clock, facilitating the understanding of special and general relativity kinematics. The app allows users to visualize relativistic effects and provides interactive features such as tunable parameters for enhanced learning. Feedback is sought regarding the app's functionality, educational value, and potential improvements. The app is accessible via web browsers on various devices, including computers and smartphones, at this link.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of special and general relativity concepts
  • Familiarity with Javascript and HTML5 programming
  • Basic knowledge of interactive web applications
  • Experience with user interface design principles
NEXT STEPS
  • Explore the implementation of interactive simulations using Javascript
  • Research the latest features of VPython for visualizing physics concepts
  • Learn about creating effective educational tools for teaching relativity
  • Investigate user feedback mechanisms for web applications
USEFUL FOR

This discussion is beneficial for educators, physics students, web developers, and anyone interested in creating or utilizing interactive tools for teaching complex scientific concepts like relativity.

joekahr
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TL;DR
App that uses a Light Clock animation to learn about special (and general) relativity.
I have written a Javascript/HTML5 app that simulates a Light Clock as a way to understand the kinematics of relativity. It shows special and general relativistic effects, and how they are related. I would appreciate any feedback on the app, it's correctness, and it's usefulness as a learning tool.

Find the app here. Start the app in a web browser on a computer, smart phone, or iPad. After starting the animation double click to bring up the control panel, double click again to hide the controls.

Comments and questions are welcome:
Does the app work on your device?
Would a YouTube tutorial be necessary, or is the app enough by itself?
Do the FAQ answers make sense?
Is the physics right, wrong, or not even wrong?
Are there missing features? Too many features?
 
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It looks like a nice app. (It seems to work on my phone and windows laptop.)
You should include a screenshot in your post. (Just copy the screenshot to your clipboard, then paste.)
It's good that you draw both the usual transverse light clock and the (often neglected) longitudinal light clock.
Having tunable parameters is nice for interactivity.
Having two separately tunable clocks might be useful for comparison.I did something similar which you may be interested in.
I created animated spacetime-diagrams of ticking "circular light-clocks" (not just the transverse and longitudinal clocks) from screen-captured VPython.
http://visualrelativity.com/LIGHTCONE/LightClock/
which is based on my paper "Visualizing proper-time in Special Relativity" https://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0505134
The spacetime diagram of the longitudinal light-clock encodes useful geometrical information that can be used for calculations (see my PF Insight https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/relativity-rotated-graph-paper/ )

Here's one that I posted on YouTube that visualizes the clock-effect/twin-paradox.
(It was written using an early version of VPython.
I have to rewrite it using the latest version of VPython/Glowscript... a backburner project.)
My visualization of the Michelson-Morley apparatus https://www.geogebra.org/m/XFXzXGTq might be useful for comparison.By the way, here is a clip from Mechanical Universe (episode 42, t=24m08)
which only draws the transverse light clock in a spacetime-diagram.
 
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joekahr said:
Summary:: App that uses a Light Clock animation to learn about special (and general) relativity.

I have written a Javascript/HTML5 app that simulates a Light Clock as a way to understand the kinematics of relativity. It shows special and general relativistic effects, and how they are related. I would appreciate any feedback on the app, it's correctness, and it's usefulness as a learning tool.

Find the app here. Start the app in a web browser on a computer, smart phone, or iPad. After starting the animation double click to bring up the control panel, double click again to hide the controls.

Comments and questions are welcome:
Does the app work on your device?
Would a YouTube tutorial be necessary, or is the app enough by itself?
Do the FAQ answers make sense?
Is the physics right, wrong, or not even wrong?
Are there missing features? Too many features?
App location has changed to https://joekahr.github.io/lightclock/
 
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Likes   Reactions: Ibix

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