Special relativity - frame of reference

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the implications of special relativity, particularly the twin paradox scenario involving Bob and Alice, who experience time differently due to high-speed travel. Participants explore the nature of time dilation, the effects of acceleration, and the criteria for determining which twin is younger upon reunion.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that Bob and Alice will experience different aging due to time dilation, but question which twin is actually younger when they reunite.
  • It is noted that only one twin, the one who accelerates, truly "leaves," suggesting a distinction in their experiences.
  • Concerns are raised about the validity of equating biological aging to mechanical clocks, with calls for experimental evidence to support claims about aging and acceleration.
  • Some participants argue that biological entities can be measured in terms of time, but others challenge the notion that biological aging can be treated like mechanical timekeeping.
  • There is a discussion about how an outside observer could determine which twin is accelerating and thus potentially younger, with suggestions including the use of accelerometers and visual cues like rocket exhaust.
  • Participants express uncertainty about how to definitively establish who is younger without a clear method of measurement, given that both twins could be seen as moving relative to an observer.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on who is younger, Bob or Alice, and there are multiple competing views regarding the implications of acceleration and the nature of biological aging in relation to mechanical clocks.

Contextual Notes

The discussion highlights the complexities of defining frames of reference in special relativity, particularly in non-inertial frames, and the challenges in establishing experimental evidence for claims about biological aging.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those exploring the philosophical implications of relativity, the nature of time, and the intersection of biology and physics.

victorqed
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This must be a basic question. :)
Bob and Alice have the same age.
So in special relativity Bob leaves Alice and travels at very high speed and when it returns is younger than Alice. Bob's time is dilated and his space is contracted from Alice frame of reference.

But now, if I take Bob's frame as the frame of reference I can say the same: Alice leaves Bob and travels at very high speed and when it returns is younger than Bob.

So what is the truth: is Bob younger or is Alice younger?
Question is: how do you decide witch of these 2 are younger when they meet again?

Thak you.
 
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victorqed said:
So in special relativity Bob leaves Alice and travels at very high speed and when it returns is younger than Alice...

But now, if I take Bob's frame as the frame of reference I can say the same: Alice leaves Bob and travels at very high speed and when it returns is younger than Bob.

So what is the truth: is Bob younger or is Alice younger?
Question is: how do you decide witch of these 2 are younger when they meet again?
Only one of them actually "leaves" - the one that fired their rocket engines. The other one remains stationary.
 
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The short version of the Insight article Vanadium50 linked: it turns out that your watch measures "distance" through spacetime in much the same way your car's odometer measures distance through space. The twins took different routes, which happen to have different "lengths", so they experience different amounts of time.
 
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victorqed said:
if I take Bob's frame as the frame of reference
Bob’s frame is non inertial. It is not equivalent to Alice’s.
 
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victorqed said:
But now, if I take Bob's frame as the frame of reference I can say the same: Alice leaves Bob and travels at very high speed and when it returns is younger than Bob.

So what is the truth: is Bob younger or is Alice younger?
Question is: how do you decide witch of these 2 are younger when they meet again?

Thak you.

You decide by determining which of the twins experiences a force by accelerating to make the journey. The two frames are not equivalent.
 
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Can someone provide me with actual experimental evidence that biological aging is affected by acceleration in this manner? II can certainly understand that mechanical clocks can be affected by a gravitational-like force, but biological aging is not a mechanical clock, far from it. To me, it sounds like ontological, philosophical speculation equating human cells to mechanical clocks. Is there experimental verification?
 
richrf said:
but biological aging is not a mechanical clock,
This is not correct. It's merely a fairly inaccurate clock.
richrf said:
To me, it sounds like ontological, philosophical speculation equating human cells to mechanical clocks. Is there experimental verification?
You are asking for evidence that people don't get younger?
 
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Ibix said:
This is not correct. It's merely a fairly inaccurate clock.
You are asking for evidence that people don't get younger?

In what manner would you suggest that biological entities of any sort can be equated to a clock. A clock, by my understanding, most present itelf as a regular rythmic movement/pulse in space. I just want to make sure we have strong experimental evidence for this and not philosophical speculation.
 
  • #10
richrf said:
Can someone provide me with actual experimental evidence that biological aging is affected by acceleration in this manner? II can certainly understand that mechanical clocks can be affected by a gravitational-like force, but biological aging is not a mechanical clock, far from it. To me, it sounds like ontological, philosophical speculation equating human cells to mechanical clocks. Is there experimental verification?
The issue is not about the type of clock, it is about the actual passage of time. Acceleration/force is not important here, except in as much as it determines relative speed, which is important.
 
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  • #11
To be slightly more helpful, imagine someone with a very steady heartbeat. Wire them to an ECG and use the beat as a timer to open and shut a gate. Arrange a pendulum clock so that the pendulum passes through the gate if it is open and crashes if it is closed. It must be synchronised to the person's heartbeat, of course.

If time dilation does not apply equally to the heartbeat as the clock, an observer in motion cannot explain why the clock continues to run, and would be forced to reject relativity. See the sticky at the top of this forum for why we don't reject relativity.
 
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  • #12
richrf said:
In what manner would you suggest that biological entities of any sort can be equated to a clock. A clock, by my understanding, most present itelf as a regular rythmic movement/pulse in space. I just want to make sure we have strong experimental evidence for this and not philosophical speculation.
You might wish to look up the cosmic ray muons. They do not have a clock, yet when in motion relative to us their half lives change exactly as relativity predicts.
 
  • #13
Dale said:
Bob’s frame is non inertial. It is not equivalent to Alice’s.

Can you explain to me how an outside observer would determine this? It would seem like either can be said to be accelerating away from each other and accelerating away from the observer, or the observer accelerating away from Bob and Alice.
 
  • #14
richrf said:
Can you explain to me how an outside observer would determine this? It would seem like either can be said to be accelerating away from each other and accelerating away from the observer, or the observer accelerating away from Bob and Alice.
Off the top of my head: Look at Alice and Bob's accelerometers. Doppler radar (in tandem with your own accelerometer). Spotting the rocket exhaust.
 
  • #15
Ibix said:
Off the top of my head: Look at Alice and Bob's accelerometers. Doppler radar. Spotting the rocket exhaust.

I am speaking of an outside observer who has no knowledge of any instrumentation or history. The only information are the objects that are moving away from each other from the observer's point of view?
 
  • #16
richrf said:
I am speaking of an outside observer who has no knowledge of any instrumentation or history. The only information are the objects that are moving away from each other from the observer's point of view?
Then there's no difference. Either or both could be moving. But they can't meet up again without turning around, so there's no unambiguous definition of which one is younger.
 
  • #17
richrf said:
In what manner would you suggest that biological entities of any sort can be equated to a clock.

By measuring the changes in clock readings between biological events. For example birth and death, conception and birth, successive heart beats, hair length measurements. People have been doing these things for as long as we've been building clocks.
 
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  • #18
Mister T said:
By measuring the changes in clock readings between biological events. For example birth and death, conception and birth, successive heart beats, hair length measurements. People have been doing these things for as long as we've been building clocks.

You are suggesting to use a mechanical clock of some sort to measure a person's age. Yes, the sun has been used for this purpose for eons. I am asking something different. When is a human or any biological entity actually been used as a clock? The entire example presented depends up experimental evidence that biological life is a clock. Lacking that, then humans have to be removed from the example and substituted with clocks for which there is evidence.
 
  • #19
Ibix said:
Then there's no difference. Either or both could be moving. But they can't meet up again without turning around, so there's no unambiguous definition of which one is younger.

It would appear that if an outside observer was attempting to determine who is aging faster, Bob, Alice, or the observer, then the observer needs to determine who is accelerating. How does the observer do this?
 
  • #20
richrf said:
It would appear that if an outside observer was attempting to determine who is aging faster, Bob, Alice, or the observer, then the observer needs to determine who is accelerating. How does the observer do this?
Neither is aging faster in any absolute sense. Different observers will have different opinions on which one they measure to be aging faster at any given time.

This isn't what's happening in the twin paradox (or, at least, it's not really relevant). The effect there is effectively that one twin took a shortcut through spacetime, a path with a lower interval, which turns out to be proportional to the time along the path.
 
  • #21
Ibix said:
Neither is aging faster in any absolute sense. Different observers will have different opinions on which one they measure to be aging faster at any given time.

This isn't what's happening in the twin paradox (or, at least, it's not really relevant). The effect there is effectively that one twin took a shortcut through spacetime, a path with a lower interval, which turns out to be proportional to the time along the path.

So as to understand you clearly, you are saying that no one is biologically aging faster. Correct?
 
  • #22
richrf said:
So as to understand you clearly, you are saying that no one is biologically aging faster. Correct?
No. I said that who is aging faster at any given moment is observer-dependent. Who ends up younger is invariant (everyone agrees on it), and that is because the two twins follow different paths with different durations.
 
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  • #23
richrf said:
you are saying that no one is biologically aging faster. Correct?

Everyone ages at one second per second along their own path through spacetime. The difference between the two twins is that Bob follows a shorter path through spacetime--one that has fewer total seconds along it--than Alice does. That is why Bob is younger when they meet up again.
 
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  • #24
Ibix said:
No. I said that who is aging faster at any given moment is observer-dependent. Who ends up younger is invariant (everyone agrees on it), and that is because the two twins follow different paths with different durations.

So, you are specifically saying that real, biological aging is observer dependent?
 
  • #25
richrf said:
you are specifically saying that real, biological aging is observer dependent?

No. Go read my post #23.
 
  • #26
Dale said:
Bob’s frame is non inertial. It is not equivalent to Alice’s.
richrf said:
Can you explain to me how an outside observer would determine this? It would seem like either can be said to be accelerating away from each other and accelerating away from the observer, or the observer accelerating away from Bob and Alice.
richrf said:
It would appear that if an outside observer was attempting to determine who is aging faster, Bob, Alice, or the observer, then the observer needs to determine who is accelerating. How does the observer do this?
Are you sure you know what "acceleration" and "inertial" mean? That might be the source of confusion here.
 
  • #27
richrf said:
So, you are specifically saying that real, biological aging is observer dependent?
The problem is that you do not seem to understand the relativity of simultaneity.
 
  • #28
richrf said:
So, you are specifically saying that real, biological aging is observer dependent?
No. I'm saying that my measurements of your aging rate will be the same as my measurements of your clock rate: slow. My own measurements of my own aging rate will be the same as my measurements of my clock rate: normal. And you would say the same, the other way round.
 
  • #29
Ibix said:
No. I'm saying that my measurements of your aging rate will be the same as my measurements of your clock rate: slow. My own measurements of my own aging rate will be the same as my measurements of my clock rate: normal. And you would say the same, the other way round.

Are you saying that real biological aging is dependent upon clock measurements? It seems that this is a running theme. Had this idea been tested? I understand that observers can disagree on their measurements but that is different than saying that biological aging is dependent upon these measurements.
 
  • #30
richrf said:
Are you saying that real biological aging is dependent upon clock measurements?

Real biological aging is governed by the same thing that governs clocks--proper time along your path through spacetime. So are all other processes involving change.
 
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