Arkalius
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Josh_Seedman said:Can't we claim that these two clocks are in fact synchronized with each other, regardless of whichever inertial reference frame they both reside in?
No. Assuming the train has Born rigidity (it maintains its proper length in each momentary rest frame during its acceleration), then the clock at the front of the train will run faster than the clock at the back during the acceleration, and when acceleration ends, both clocks will again run at the same speed but will be out of sync in the train's rest frame. In the platform rest frame, both clocks would slow down as the train accelerates at the same rate and remain synchronized. This is due to the fact that the plane of simultaneity at each point on the train is shifting during acceleration, causing "now" for any point on the train ahead of the point of interest (in the direction of acceleration) to shift into the "future" from where it was, and causing "now" for any point behind the point of interest to shift into what was the past of where it was.
The most important fact to remember about the relativity of simultaneity is that if you have two clocks separated by some nonzero distance in space, then they can be synchronized in at most one valid inertial frame of reference. In all others they will not be.