Snip3r said:
ghwellsjr said:
So right off the bat, the clock on Mars is behind the clock on Earth by almost a second. But then the clock on Earth runs slightly slower then the one on Mars, so if we wait long enough the clock on Mars will eventually catch up to the clock on Earth and from then on the clock on Earth will remain behind the clock on Mars.
but if my FoR is earth, does Mars clock continue to run slow?
You can analyze any problem using any FoR and you will always get the same answers (that matter). If my analysis shows that the clock on Earth runs slower than the clock on Mars, how can any other analysis show otherwise?
The problem with using the Earth as a FoR is that it is not inertial and you have very complicated patterns of motion for Mars relative to Earth but if you're thinking that since the Earth is at rest in this non-inertial FoR and that Mars is always in motion and therefore the only one experiencing time dilation then you should consider this:
Let's think about the Sun and the Earth. Since the Earth is always in motion relative to the inertial rest frame of the Sun, it experiences a non-reciprocal time dilation that the Sun does not experience. This is an example of the twin paradox which is similar to the one that Einstein introduced in his famous 1905 paper introducing Special Relativity. Since the Earth is not inertial, you cannot use the Earth as a FoR and say that the Sun is in orbit around the Earth and conclude that the time dilation is reciprocal and applies to the Sun and not to the Earth.
So in a similar way, you cannot use the non-inertial rest frame of the Earth and say that the time dilation is all on Mars.
Snip3r said:
For a moment consider this assume Earth and Mars are in the same orbit (not concentric circles, just to avoid confusion and i think this has no effect)and Earth as FoR. Now when clock B is instantaneously transported to Mars it shows less than 1 second after reaching mars(clock A on Earth shows 1 sec).
I'm afraid you've lost me here. If Earth and Mars are in the same orbit (the same distance from the Sun), then they will experience the same time dilation and their clocks will remain about 1 second apart.
Snip3r said:
Now as the speed of Mars is less, according to Earth clock B is returning. isn't this similar to twin paradox? so clock B continue to tick slower even after reaching mars?what am i missing?
The speed of Mars is less than what? If you are using the Earth as a FoR, then the speed of Mars is more than Earth since Earth is at rest. Please explain what you are thinking of here.
Then you say "according to Earth clock B is returning"--but from where? I have no idea what you are proposing here. But whatever it is, would it be the same if you had concentric orbits instead of the planets being in the same orbit?
Clock B ticks slower (practically stops) during its high-speed one-second trip to Mars but as soon as it comes to rest on Mars, its tick rate goes almost back to normal but faster, not slower, than the Earth clock.
I'm not sure what you are missing because I'm missing an understanding of what you are proposing.