granpa said:
if an object is made of particles that are interacting via electric and magnetic fields that propagate at the speed of light then does it not follow that a moving object will experience a loss of simultaneity?
in other words, it is not necessary to go outside of classical physics to explain loss of simultaneity.
No - SR results in simultaneity being a frame dependent concept, it is not simply an allowance for the time taken for light-speed communications to reach the observer.
Consider a star 1000 light-yrs away, you are seeing it as it was 1000 years ago.
You may ask, "What is the star doing
now, might it have gone supernova?"
To answer this question you take the state of the star as you see it (as it was 1000 years ago) and project forward 1000 years into its future, you conclude that it was unstable and that now it has gone supernova, and
now it no longer exists as it was.
Another observer happens to be passing close by you, traveling towards the star at high speed. They see the star in the same state as you do. The photons from the star reach you and them simultaneously as you both pass each other close by.
However, they measure the star's distance as, say, only 800 light years and conclude that they are seeing it as it was 800 years ago.
They ask the same question and project the state of the star 800 years into its future and conclude that it was unstable and that
now it is about to go supernova, but not just yet.
Both observers have a clear idea of when
now is, but one thinks that is when the star is about to go supernova and the other just after it has exploded.
The concept of
now, or
simultaneity, is frame dependent.
I hope this helps.
Garth