nitsuj said:
I can't follow the last two points, The separation between muon creation and landing is time like. I'm not sure why you suggest the muon MUST survive. It "lands", and they have a "fixed" lifespan. Yes, there must be acceleration in with my idealized muon landing, but even with that, the "fixed" lifespan is a pretty solid comparative for a measure of proper time in both frames.
You said "the muon hits the ground, and takes a break checking out this new shared frame with Earth, looks back and says...". This is vague, I gave the the interpretation that makes sense to me: the muon stopped. If the muon is considered not to have stopped, then, just because it has reached the ground does not mean it shares a frame with the Earth in normal usage. Normal usage is that the frame of an object is short hand for the frame in which an object is at rest. If the muon doesn't change motion to match the earth, it doesn't share a frame in this sense. In any other sense, I have no idea what you could possibly mean.
I said, so obviously agree, that the timelike interval from muon creation to muon destruction is invariant - same in all frames, and is e.g. 1 nanosecond in all frames. I didn't know what spacetime interval you meant since you did not define it, so I threw out two additional intervals of interest that happen to be spacelike. If you are uninterested in these intervals, fine.
Do you agree that in the muon rest frame:
- the muon ages 1 nanosecond
- the Earth clock will run slow, e.g. elapse much less than 1 nanosecond (< 1 picosecond) between the event simultaneous with muon creation, in this frame, and when the Earth clock reaches the muon. That is, the Earth ages < 1 picosecond in the one nanosecond life of the muon.
- The Earth will have traveled e.g only .3 meters in this frame during the time between creation and destruction of the muon. Thus there is no mystery why the Earth reaches the muon in 1 nanosecond - it has only .3 meters to cover.
Do you agree that in the Earth rest frame:
- the muon ages 1 nanosecond
- the time between creation and destruction is 10 microseconds. That is the Earth ages 10 microseconds between creation and destruction of muon (per this frame).
- the distance traveled by the muon between creation and destruction is e.g. 3 km. The muon reaches the ground because it only ages 1 nanosecond in the 10 microseconds it takes to cover this distance.
In contrast, if twin A is inertial and twin B passes A at some high relative speed, but is uniformly accelerating such that they will meet up with A again later:
- A and B agree on the distance traveled by the other (using the coordinates considered most physical for B).
- A expects and finds that B will age less. B expects and finds that B will age less.
Let's focus on which of these statements you disagree with. If you agree with them all, then we only disagree on how to describe the facts, but not on the facts themselves.