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PS it's the speed of light that's invariant. Not its momentum vector.
Yes it does. You may be mistaking the (true) statement that the speed of light is independent of its source for the (false) one that the velocity of light is independent of its source. As PeroK has already pointed out, your (mis)conception of how light behaves is internally inconsistent, which is why you are struggling with it.AlMetis said:“Objects” acquire momentum from their source (cars), light does not.
PeroK said:PS it's the speed of light that's invariant. Not its momentum vector.
Exactly! Therefore, if you agree, that the light-pulse strikes the mirror in the rest-frame of the light-clock, then you must also agree, that the light-pulse strikes the mirror in the other reference-frame.AlMetis said:Whether the pulse strikes the mirror or not is not something determined by an observer’s choice of reference frame
Yes I do agree. I never said otherwise.Sagittarius A-Star said:Exactly! Therefore, if you agree, that the light-pulse strikes the mirror in the rest-frame of the light-clock, then you must also agree, that the light-pulse strikes the mirror in the other reference-frame.
This does not mean the observer on the train is wrong, or the observer on the platform is wrong. It it does mean time is running slower for one of these two observers.AlMetis said:This length is a “measurement” not common to both observers, but it is common and a LONGER measure for all observers at rest with the source (platform) and it is common and a SHORTER measure for all observers at rest with the train.
In the case of uniform inertial movement (which is what we have here, as opposed to the completely different and unrelated twin paradox situations) both observers find that time is running slower for the other observer, both are correct, the situation is completely symmetrical, and there is no meaningful way in which we can say that time is running slower for one or the other.AlMetis said:This does not mean the observer on the train is wrong, or the observer on the platform is wrong. It it does mean time is running slower for one of these two observers.
Can anyone explain which it is?
You did say otherwise:AlMetis said:Yes I do agree. I never said otherwise.
SR can treat the particle model and wave model of light equally good.AlMetis said:When the emitter at the bottom of the clock is pointing at the mirror at the top of the clock, the light pulse will NOT strike the mirror if the mirror moves after emission. We are talking about a pulse that travels in a straight line in the direction the emitter is pointed.
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We could say the light pulse scenario is just a tool for discussion and the reality is light is a wave so the light will strike the mirror even when the mirror moves after emission.
Is the symmetry broken if we know which measures a shorter light path?Nugatory said:the situation is completely symmetrical, and there is no meaningful way in which we can say that time is running slower for one or the other.
You’re taking what I said out of context.Sagittarius A-Star said:You did say otherwise:
This has been answered several times. If the pulse hits the mirror in the mirror rest frame then it will hit in the frame where the mirror is moving. Your argument that the pulse will not hit in a frame where the mirror is moving is not correct.AlMetis said:It will not hit the mirror if the mirror moves, but whether the mirror moves or not depends on the frame of reference chosen. This is still my original question now posed in three different scenarios.
... is correct and contradicts to:AlMetis said:If the light pulse does not hit the mirror, it will not be seen to hit the mirror in any frame of reference.
If it does hit the mirror, it will be seen to hit it in every frame of reference.
... which is wrong. See:AlMetis said:It will not hit the mirror if the mirror moves, but whether the mirror moves or not depends on the frame of reference chosen.
No.AlMetis said:Is the symmetry broken if we know which measures a shorter light path?
Do you agree, that the light-pulse has in the (primed) rest-frame of the light-clock the following momentum in y-direction?AlMetis said:@PeroK, “Objects” acquire momentum from their source (cars), light does not.
At this level of discussion, please forget anything you think to know about "photons". I don't understand, why we still teach the totally wrong picture of Einstein's conception of 1905. Note that Einstein himself admitted as late as 1954 that he doesn't consider to have understood himself the "nature of radiation". What's for sure is that the naive photon picture of 1905 is completely wrong. Light (i.e., electromagnetic waves) have in no sense the properties of a localizable particle. According to modern QED, and that's what's indeed describet the "nature of radiation", i.e., the electromagnetic interaction, correctly, photons do not even have a proper position observable.Sagittarius A-Star said:You did say otherwise:
SR can treat the particle model and wave model of light equally good.
Then you must also admit, that the classical wave picture is completely wrong. It predicts i.e. wrongly the pattern from a double-slit experiment with only a few photons.vanhees71 said:What's for sure is that the naive photon picture of 1905 is completely wrong.
It has been stated a number of times and the math that repeats those statements has been well documented. But neither explain why.As I have said before, if the pulse is seen from one frame to hit the mirror, it will be seem from all frames to hit the mirror, if it misses in one frame it will miss in all frames.Ibix said:This has been answered several times. If the pulse hits the mirror in the mirror rest frame then it will hit in the frame where the mirror is moving. Your argument that the pulse will not hit in a frame where the mirror is moving is not correct.
PeroK pointed out the reason on the last page, but you replied:AlMetis said:But neither explain why.
The problem with your reasoning is thinking that light does not acquire momentum from its source. If you accept that it does then all your problems go away (and you don't violate momentum conservation). The self-contradictory mess you are in trying to think otherwise should tell you that you should be considering what we've said.AlMetis said:“Objects” acquire momentum from their source (cars), light does not.
Good!AlMetis said:As I have said before, if the pulse is seen from one frame to hit the mirror, it will be seem from all frames to hit the mirror, if it misses in one frame it will miss in all frames.
That is not a guess, or a hypothesis, or a wish. It is absolutely clear, empirical fact.
Clearly, your examples must have an error in them. There is nothing more profound than that.AlMetis said:I am not questioning that. I am questioning why that is contradicted in the examples I gave.
I don't see that's what we've been doing.AlMetis said:The responses have all been something similar to:
“it is not contradicted in your examples if you interpret your examples as we say you should.”
I can accept that if you just explain “why”. Telling me what to “believe” is not teaching me science.
Okay, but it looks like another complicated word salad to me.AlMetis said:Here is another example that I think is detailed enough that any mistake/s I have made should be ealily explained.
You need to make this more precise.AlMetis said:When I am next to and at rest with the sun, I am at rest with where the light leaves the sun at any instant.
I don't follow this. You need to make this more precise as well.AlMetis said:A minute later I can still be at rest with the sun, but if I am, I am moving roughly 828,000 km/hr away from where the light left the sun a minute ago.
That makes no sense to me. You can't do physics in these cryptic terms that might mean many different things.AlMetis said:If I don’t know, or have no way to measure this motion of the sun/me relative to where the light was emitted from it a minute ago, that does not change the path of that light relative to any frame of reference.
This is just a roundabout way to say that the light eventually reaches the Earth.AlMetis said:If that light hits the earth, every frame will see it hit the earth. The motion that determines whether that light hits the earth is not the motion of any frame relative to the earth, or sun. It is the motion of the earth relative to where the light was emitted. The earth is either on a collision path with the light, or not. The light does not change its direction to chase the earth.
I can't follow what you mean by this.AlMetis said:When A and B see S remain centered between them, you and I will predict the path of the light pulse emitted from S will be symmetric as observed by A and B.
I don't understand this statement.AlMetis said:When E sees A, B and S moving along a common axis (x) they will all be moving relative to where the light is emitted from S at any instant. Unlike me at rest with the sun, E remains where the light was emitted. With this “new” information, you and I will claim the path observed by A and B will NOT be symmetrical.
I don't understand anything about your scenario. It's just a jumble of words. Sorry.AlMetis said:Why does what E measures change what you and I predict will be seen by A and B if the relative motion of A, B and S is all that determines the path of the light observed by A and B and that relative motion does not change?
A frame is a convention for attaching numerical labels (for example, x,y,z and t coordinates) to events. Therefore, using a different frame can only change the labels attached to the events, not the events themselves. Light hitting the mirror is an event.AlMetis said:As I have said before, if the pulse is seen from one frame to hit the mirror, it will be seem from all frames….
I can accept that if you just explain “why”. Telling me what to “believe” is not teaching me science.
There is no classical particle model of light. People like Newton speculated about such a model, but nobody ever actually developed one that accounted for all of the experimental facts. At the classical level, the only experimentally verified theory of light we have is Maxwell electrodynamics.Sagittarius A-Star said:The relativistic Doppler/aberration formula can be derived correctly with both, the classical particle model and classical wave model of light.
The usual way that is done with light, if you're interested in something that can be treated, if you don't look at it too closely, as a "particle" moving on a null worldline, is to use a "radar pulse" or "light pulse" or something like that: a short burst of radiation emitted over a time scale that is much shorter than any other time scale of interest in the problem.Sagittarius A-Star said:It should be possible to discuss SR, a classical theory, without invoking QED.
I think I will first wait until @AlMetis has answered my posting #45 and then do eventually a Lorentz transformation of the momentum-four-vector, because he wrote (wrongly) in #29, that light cannot acquire a momentum.vanhees71 said:So stick to classical electrodynamics. It's a pretty simple calculation with a Lorentz transformation of the wave-four-vector.
Yes, I called it already "light-pulse".PeterDonis said:"radar pulse" or "light pulse"
Ok, good. But classically, this "light pulse" is not a particle and there is no classical particle theory of light that explains its behavior. It's just a useful approximation to the more complicated behavior that the classical wave theory of light gives.Sagittarius A-Star said:Yes, I called it already "light-pulse".
Why it is contradicted in the examples? It is contradicted in the examples because the examples you gave all had some mistake in them. That mistake has been pointed out for each example. You have been answered "why". Clearly each time.AlMetis said:I am not questioning that. I am questioning why that is contradicted in the examples I gave.
This should read:AlMetis said:When I am next to and at rest with the sun, I am at rest with where the light leaves the sun at any instant. A minute later I can still be at rest with the sun, but if I am, I am moving roughly 828,000 km/hr away from where the light left the sun a minute ago.
No light path was changed relative to any frame. However you mistakenly cited velocities with respect to two different frames without explicitly mentioning which velocities pertained to which frames.AlMetis said:If I don’t know, or have no way to measure this motion of the sun/me relative to where the light was emitted from it a minute ago, that does not change the path of that light relative to any frame of reference. If that light hits the earth, every frame will see it hit the earth. The motion that determines whether that light hits the earth is not the motion of any frame relative to the earth, or sun. It is the motion of the earth relative to where the light was emitted. The earth is either on a collision path with the light, or not. The light does not change its direction to chase the earth.
This ambiguous and so it would be improved by explicitly stating:AlMetis said:When A and B see S remain centered between them, you and I will predict the path of the light pulse emitted from S will be symmetric as observed by A and B.
This is also ambiguous and should be written:AlMetis said:When E sees A, B and S moving along a common axis (x) they will all be moving relative to where the light is emitted from S at any instant. Unlike me at rest with the sun, E remains where the light was emitted. With this “new” information, you and I will claim the path observed by A and B will NOT be symmetrical.
By "seen by A and B" do you mean "in the rest frame of A and B" or do you mean "signals recieved by A and B"? Either way, what E measures does not change what you and I predict. But you should get in the habit of writing unambiguous statements.AlMetis said:Why does what E measures change what you and I predict will be seen by A and B if the relative motion of A, B and S is all that determines the path of the light observed by A and B and that relative motion does not change?
Can you provide evidence or a link to evidence for your claim?AlMetis said:@PeroK, “Objects” acquire momentum from their source (cars), light does not.
Source:Ikaros: First Successful Solar Sail
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This proved that the Ikaros has generated the biggest acceleration through photon during interplanetary flight in history."
Launched in May 2010, Ikaros demonstrated the effect that individual light photons have when hitting a solar sail. While each photon is small and only generates a small push, over time the accumulated energy from each one of the strikes pushes the solar sail (and anything attached to it) forward.