Special relativity implies the space cannot be "closed"?

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the implications of special relativity (SR) regarding the structure of the universe, particularly in relation to closed geometries like spheres and cylinders. Participants argue that SR cannot apply to a universe with a non-trivial global topology, as it leads to paradoxes when comparing proper times of observers moving along such paths. General relativity (GR) is presented as a solution, asserting that SR is only valid in local, flat spacetime regions. The conversation concludes that while SR may not accommodate certain topologies, GR provides the necessary framework to analyze these scenarios without contradictions.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of special relativity (SR) principles
  • Familiarity with general relativity (GR) concepts
  • Knowledge of proper time and inertial frames
  • Basic grasp of spacetime geometry and topology
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the implications of Lorentz transformations in different spacetime geometries
  • Explore the concept of proper time in general relativity
  • Investigate the differences between Minkowski spacetime and non-trivial topologies
  • Learn about the twin paradox and its resolutions in various contexts
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Physicists, students of theoretical physics, and anyone interested in the foundational concepts of relativity and the structure of the universe.

Hiero
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I think special relativity would disallow our universe from having the structure similar to an ant on a sphere. What I mean is that it can't be possible to travel in a constant direction and to come back to your original location.

Suppose there is an observer S on a planet and an observer S' in a spaceship having a relative speed v. (These are the only things in this hypothetical universe and the gravity is ignored.) Suppose when S' moves past S they synchronize their clocks, so they both read zero at the instant of the first passing. Now suppose S' moves "around the surface of the sphere" and comes back to S (without ever needing to accelerate). Then we will have a paradox, because these two events will occur at the same place in both frames, and so each frame will say they measured the proper time and the other frame's clock was ticking more slowly between the events. (There is no acceleration as in the resolution of the twin "paradox"). We can't have both clocks show a lower reading than each other, so this set up seems paradoxical.

Is this a justified reason to disallow universes with such structure?
 
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If you had a railroad track that went around the Earth on a Great Circle, you would get exactly the same results. Do you think THAT situation is impossible?
 
phinds said:
If you had a railroad track that went around the Earth on a Great Circle, you would get exactly the same results. Do you think THAT situation is impossible?

Perhaps the example should do away with a planet and instead simply say that space is set up in such a way as to curve back on itself, so no acceleration or gravity is needed.
 
Hiero said:
Is this a justified reason to disallow universes with such structure?
No, because special relativity starts with the assumption that the universe does not have such a structure. Thus, any contradictions that you find from applying SR to a universe that does have such a structure are a result of having started with inconsistent premises and tells you nothing except that your premises are inconsistent.

General relativity resolves the problem by saying that SR only applies locally, across volumes of spacetime that are small enough that curvature effects can be ignored. Clearly this isn't the case for a round trip around a sphere.
 
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Isn't such a universe automatically curved? If they follow a circular path but don't accelerate, how can it be flat spacetime?
 
Battlemage! said:
Isn't such a universe automatically curved? If they follow a circular path but don't accelerate, how can it be flat spacetime?
It cannot be. And therefore it cannot be described SR, except as an approximation valid only across regions small enough that the curvature can be neglected.
 
Nugatory said:
It cannot be.
Yes it can. The OP is suggesting a cylinder-like universe. Such a universe is not necessarily curved. It has a non-trivial global topology so it is not globally Minkowski space, but it is flat.

Battlemage! said:
Isn't such a universe automatically curved? If they follow a circular path but don't accelerate, how can it be flat spacetime?
It is not a circular path. A cylinder has no intrinsic curvature and yet you can draw a straight line on it that closes.
 
Nugatory said:
No, because special relativity starts with the assumption that the universe does not have such a structure. Thus, any contradictions that you find from applying SR to a universe that does have such a structure are a result of having started with inconsistent premises
My understanding is that the principle of relativity (that all inertial frames are equivalent) implies the Lorentz transforms with a general limiting speed, and all special relativity does is postulate this speed is that of light. Those are the only 2 assumptions I know which underly SR but I lack GR knowledge so perhaps you can give your perspective on the assumptions underlying SR.

Nugatory said:
General relativity resolves the problem by saying that SR only applies locally, across volumes of spacetime that are small enough that curvature effects can be ignored.
Orodruin says a cylindrical like structure would give no intrinsic curvature. How would general relativity treat such a universe without seeing this paradox?
 
Hiero said:
Orodruin says a cylindrical like structure would give no intrinsic curvature. How would general relativity treat such a universe without seeing this paradox?
There is no paradox. The only paradox arises when you try to apply concepts derived in Minkowski spacetime to a nontrivial global setting. If you have the full spacetime structure it is a simple matter of computing the proper times of the world lines. The result is only dependent on the spacetime geometry, not on any local choice of coordinates.
 
  • #10
In a cylindrical universe there's a time-like direction parallel to the axis of the cylinder and many that aren't. That direction is detectable in universe, so frames aren't interchangeable as they are in a non-cylindrical spacetime. So there's no particular issue with the two inertial clocks having different readings when they meet up again.

The reason it seems paradoxical is that only the observer moving along the cylinder can draw a Minkowski-like chart covering the whole of spacetime. Other observers can't get it to mesh on the other side, so naive time dilation calculations don't quite work. The relativity of simultaneity bites you if you don't work it out carefully.
 
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  • #11
Orodruin said:
The OP is suggesting a cylinder-like universe.
Is he? The original post says "sphere", twice. But of course you're right about the surface of a cylinder.
 
  • #12
Nugatory said:
Is he? The original post says "sphere", twice. But of course you're right about the surface of a cylinder.
Indeed the word used is "sphere", but I think the tone of the post suggests something more general and there are flat spacetimes with the properties relevant to the OP, cylinders, tori, etc. I do not think it is desirable to hide this from the OP just because he happened to use the word "sphere".
 
  • #13
I think he means spatially a sphere, which can be a cylinder space-time with spherical space-like slices.
 
  • #14
The word sphere was just an analogy, the point was just that an inertial frame comes back to an old location.
Now that it has been emphasized so much though, let me say, I actually do not understand the issue with the sphere; isn't the 'inertial path' on the surface of a sphere along a great circle? So in a universe restricted to the surface of a (higher dimensional) sphere, an object traveling with no acceleration-(at least none "inside" the universe?)* will come back to an old location, which is the point of my setup.
*[I'm thinking in analogy to particles restricted to surfaces; there will be some acceleration "outside" (normal) the universe, and I'm not sure where that fits. But I would also say that exists for the cylindrical case, so I'm still not sure of the sphere's problem.]

Anyway thank you for the insightful replies. General Relativity will likely be a fun one to study in the future.
 
  • #15
Generally, it is invalid to argue that because the curvature is extremely, the universe must be extremely large. Proof: Pacman ;)
 
  • #16
Wouldn't one of the observers have to "stop" relative to the other since you can only compare clocks and extrapolate any relativistic time dilation when both observers are in the same inertial frame? Just a thought.
 
  • #17
Flatland said:
Wouldn't one of the observers have to "stop" relative to the other since you can only compare clocks and extrapolate any relativistic time dilation when both observers are in the same inertial frame? Just a thought.
No. You only need two instantaneous clock comparisons at first and second meeting. Why would you need to be at rest with respect to a clock to read it?
 
  • #18
Ibix said:
No. You only need two instantaneous clock comparisons at first and second meeting. Why would you need to be at rest with respect to a clock to read it?

What I mean is that according to what the OP proposed, when observer S' circumnavigates the Universe and passes by observer S again, observer S' will observe the clock tick of S to be slower than S' and vice versa. One of the observers would have to decelerate in order to compare clocks and see who's clock actually ran slower. In other words there is no paradox in what the OP proposes.
 
  • #19
Hiero said:
Now suppose S' moves "around the surface of the sphere" and comes back to S (without ever needing to accelerate). Then we will have a paradox,

I think the flaw in your logic is thinking that one of them must accelerate in order for them to experience different amounts of proper time. It's not the acceleration of one twin that explains the difference in ages. It's the fact that they take different paths through spacetime. There are versions of the twin paradox where neither twin experiences nonzero proper acceleration.
 
  • #20
Flatland said:
observer S' will observe the clock tick of S to be slower than S' and vice versa
This is time dilation in action, and you seem to be accepting this. So I don't understand why you then say:
Flatland said:
One of the observers would have to decelerate in order to notice any time dilation.
...since that seems to directly contradict your previous sentence.
Flatland said:
In other words there is no paradox in what the OP proposes.
There is no paradox because the topology of the cylindrical universe picks out a frame that is special in a global sense, although local measurements are completely in line with the principle of relativity.
 
  • #21
Ibix said:
This is time dilation in action, and you seem to be accepting this. So I don't understand why you then say:
...since that seems to directly contradict your previous sentence.

I'm saying that because one of the observers would have to stop and compare clocks with the other to see which clock ran "absolutely" slower a la symmetry breaking.
 
  • #22
Flatland said:
I'm saying that because one of the observers would have to stop and compare clocks with the other to see which clock ran "absolutely" slower a la symmetry breaking.
Each observer takes a photo of their own clock as they pass the first time, and another when they pass the second time. Then they transmit the photos to the other. The difference in the readings of their own photos tells them their elapsed time; the difference in the readings of the other observer's photos tells them the other's elapsed time. Why would slowing down be necessary?
 
  • #23
Ibix said:
Each observer takes a photo of their own clock as they pass the first time, and another when they pass the second time. Then they transmit the photos to the other. The difference in the readings of their own photos tells them their elapsed time; the difference in the readings of the other observer's photos tells them the other's elapsed time. Why would slowing down be necessary?

Let me use a different example. Let's suppose observer S' decelerates and stops next to observer S (after circumnavigating the Universe) and compared clocks. What would their clocks read?
 
  • #24
Flatland said:
Let me use a different example. Let's suppose observer S' decelerates and stops next to observer S (after circumnavigating the Universe) and compared clocks. What would their clocks read?
At the moment of meeting, exactly the same as if they didn't stop. After that the results would start to diverge from the other scenario, of course.

Edit: The only thing that matters is the intervals along the two different paths. Saying they need to stop is like saying you can't compare the lengths of two lines unless they're parallel for at least art of their length.
 
  • #25
Ibix said:
At the moment of meeting, exactly the same as if they didn't stop. After that the results would start to diverge from the other scenario, of course.

That's exactly what I was trying to get at. After S' stops, his clock will indeed appear to be slower when compared to S. The OP seems to suggest that this would happen even if one of them didn't stop.
 
  • #26
Flatland said:
That's exactly what I was trying to get at. After S' stops, his clock will indeed appear to be slower when compared to S.
What? When they come to relative rest their clocks will tick at the same rate. While they are not at rest, they will both say that the other's clock ticks slowly. None of this changes the fact that the one who went round the cylinder will show a lower elapsed time than the one who did not. This is because the interval along the path around the cylinder is shorter than the interval along the cylinder. This is closely analogous to drawing a line up a Euclidean cylinder and another spiralling round it. The spiral line is longer than the straight one, whether or not I continue it past the straight line.
Flatland said:
The OP seems to suggest that this would happen even if one of them didn't stop.
Correctly so, given the later clarification of what was meant by a spherical universe.
 
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  • #27
Ibix said:
What? When they come to relative rest their clocks will tick at the same rate. While they are not at rest, they will both say that the other's clock ticks slowly.

What I'm saying is that less time would have appeared to have passed not that one clock will actually tick slower compared to other when at rest.

Ibix said:
None of this changes the fact that the one who went round the cylinder will show a lower elapsed time than the one who did not

How would you determine who went around the cylinder and who didn't? Observer S' can just as well claim that it was observer S who circumnavigated the cylinder. The OP specifically mentioned there were no accelerations involved.
 
  • #28
Flatland said:
What I'm saying is that less time would have appeared to have passed not that one clock will actually tick slower compared to other when at rest.
Right. But that's true whether they stop or not, as my photos experiment shows. How could the photos be altered by whether or not one of the ships accelerates immediately after the photo was taken?
 
  • #29
Ibix said:
Right. But that's true whether they stop or not, as my photos experiment shows. How could the photos be altered by whether or not one of the ships accelerates immediately after the photo was taken?

Yes but if one of them stopped relative to the other AND THEN compared clocks, BOTH observers would agree that less time has passed on the clock that decelerated and stopped.
 
  • #30
Flatland said:
Yes but if one of them stopped relative to the other AND THEN compared clocks, BOTH observers would agree that less time has passed on the clock who decelerated and stopped.
I fail to see your point. Both observers would agree that less time has elapsed on the one who circumnavigates the cylinder, whether or not either of them stopped.
 

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