Special relativity and the speed of light constant

In summary: Light travels through space not through time. In summary, light travels through space, not through time. However, its speed cannot be determined by any observer, as it remains constant for all inertial observers. It is possible to measure the round trip "average" speed of light, which is always calculated as "c". Through special relativity, we define inertial reference frames where all beams of light travel at the same speed regardless of their direction. This enables us to establish a consistent set of coordinates for any inertial reference frame.
  • #1
TimeRip496
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Hi guys. I know that light does not travel through time. Is that because its speed is constant for all observer?
 
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  • #2
TimeRip496 said:
Hi guys. I know that light does not travel through time. Is that because its speed is constant for all observer?
I don't understand what you mean. Light travels across time. It takes time for light to get from one place to another.

If you mean that in the frame of reference of light it sees no change in time then you have a fundamental misunderstanding (a common one) because there IS no "frame of reference of light" and so the thought that it does not experience time is a non-starter.
 
  • #3
TimeRip496 said:
Hi guys. I know that light does not travel through time. Is that because its speed is constant for all observer?
Light travels through space not through time. But no observer can determine the speed with which any particular beam or ray of light travels. However, all inertial observers can measure the round trip "average" speed of two beams or rays of light one going from a source to a mirror and one reflecting back from the mirror to the source. The observers have one clock or timer at the source to measure the time interval and a ruler to measure the distance between the source and the mirror. From that they can calculate the "average" speed of the two beams or rays and they will get the same value called "c". So what we do in Special Relativity is define Inertial Reference Frames (IRF's) in which all beams or rays of light travel at c no matter what their directions. This enables us to establish a consistent set of coordinates for any IRF.

Does that make sense to you? Any questions?
 
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  • #4
ghwellsjr said:
Light travels through space not through time. ... no observer can determine the speed with which any particular beam or ray of light travels. However, all inertial observers can measure the round trip "average" speed of two beams or rays of light one going from a source to a mirror and one reflecting back from the mirror to the source.

That's a perfect subsequent comment that helps clarify the first.
 
  • #5
ghwellsjr said:
Light travels through space not through time.

How can anything travel through space without the passage of time? Any observer who can see a photon travel through space will always be able to also account for a passage of time. If you meant from the perspective of a photon, since it doesn't experience time it cannot experience space (separation), in that context they are non-existent and therefore such a concept (travel through space without time) is nonsensical.
 
  • #6
He didn't say there is not "passage of time"...whatever you intend to mean with "passage". He said light doesn't travel through time, which could mean any number of things.

Wiki - In a light-like interval, the spatial distance between two events is exactly balanced by the time between the two events. The events define a squared spacetime interval of zero ([PLAIN]http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/6/6/0/6602be59bc8c0b4a73716ac3e62afa31.png)[/U]. Light-like intervals are also known as "null" intervals.

Consider 1. spacetime relation/mink-metric and 2. the spatial interval is exactly equal to the time interval.

That's one of many possible answers for the second comment about the difficulty (impossibility to absolutely) measure the one-way speed of light.
 
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  • #7
nitsuj said:
He didn't say there is not "passage of time"...whatever you intend to mean with "passage". He said light doesn't travel through time, which could mean any number of things.

Link, the definition of "through": http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/through

Anyway you look at it using the correct definition amounts to the same meaning of "Light travels through space not through time", that light can somehow experience movement in space without movement in time.

The space time interval you brought up has nothing to do with it, if you believe otherwise please explain how a light-like interval is related to no experience (travel through) time? Because even that interval has both components of time and distance at its core.
 
  • #8
ghwellsjr said:
Light travels through space not through time. But no observer can determine the speed with which any particular beam or ray of light travels. However, all inertial observers can measure the round trip "average" speed of two beams or rays of light one going from a source to a mirror and one reflecting back from the mirror to the source. The observers have one clock or timer at the source to measure the time interval and a ruler to measure the distance between the source and the mirror. From that they can calculate the "average" speed of the two beams or rays and they will get the same value called "c". So what we do in Special Relativity is define Inertial Reference Frames (IRF's) in which all beams or rays of light travel at c no matter what their directions. This enables us to establish a consistent set of coordinates for any IRF.

Does that make sense to you? Any questions?
So we see light traveling through time due to our passage through time? And speed of light isn't c?
 
  • #9
TimeRip496 said:
through time? And speed of light isn't c?
I can't imagine how you could come to that conclusion based on anything that has been said here.
 
  • #10
Think of it this way, space and time are "linked" together, they form space-time, if you are not moving through space(remaining completely still), you move through time. So now think of it this way, you are moving north in an empty road at a certain speed (say 100 kmph), your advancement toward the north would be equivalent to your speed (100 kmph). Now you take a road northwest at the same speed (100 kmph), this time however,your advancement towards the north in this road is slower than the north road. If you wanted to go north(say north was a flat line), going northwest would only slow you down, you would get there, but slower. In this case, north is time, and west is space, the faster you move in space, the steeper the angle of the "northwest", that is why objects at the speed of light would move slower than ordinary objects.
There is a book about this called "The Fabric of the Cosmos", there are also documentaries based on the book with the author himself as the host, you can watch them online and they are very helpful.
 
  • #11
TimeRip496 said:
So we see light traveling through time due to our passage through time? And speed of light isn't c?
Don't think of time as a flowing river, it is more of a frozen one.
 
  • #12
phinds said:
I can't imagine how you could come to that conclusion based on anything that has been said here.
Not surprising as i based it on another thread which gives this analogy:

Pretend you are in a service elevator in a building under construction. You get in the elevator and ascend to the top (it is a one way elevator).

As you go up through level after level of floors, you realize that there are loooong strands of yarn tied to pillars from floor to floor at all sorts of angles. The first piece is tied to the the 2nd floor pillar right next to the elevator. The other end of that same piece is tied waaaaay up on the 6th floor to a pillar out on the north east corner of the building.

You can only experience one floor at a time, so you only see sections of yarn that are horizontally in your line of sight. What you see is that the line of yarn (that is, only the short section you can see on the floor you're on) starts very close to you (right by the elevator) and "moves" away from you, ending up, four floors later, way out at the north east corner. When you were on the first floor there was no yarn to be seen, and when you passed the sixth floor, there was no yarn to be seen.

You have experienced this bit of yarn as an apparent movement through the building'sspace as a function of yourtravel through the floors (and, incidentally, through time). It was "emitted" on the second floor, and "absorbed" on the sixth floor.

All the while, the string has had no experience of "moving" from floor to floor, no experience of emission or absorption - or of any "time" whatsoever.

Not sure if this is a good one.
 
  • #13
Quds Akbar said:
Don't think of time as a flowing river, it is more of a frozen one.
For light, won't it have a graph that has the gradient of c? The graph will still show that light travel through time too.
 
  • #14
phinds said:
I don't understand what you mean. Light travels across time. It takes time for light to get from one place to another.

If you mean that in the frame of reference of light it sees no change in time then you have a fundamental misunderstanding (a common one) because there IS no "frame of reference of light" and so the thought that it does not experience time is a non-starter.
What do you mean by no frame of reference of light? Forgive me as I just started this.
 
  • #15
TimeRip496 said:
What do you mean by no frame of reference of light? Forgive me as I just started this.
You would be well served to read the entries in the Cosmology FAQ. It explains this and many other things.
 
  • #16
TimeRip496 said:
Not surprising as i based it on another thread which gives this analogy:

Pretend you are in a service elevator in a building under construction. You get in the elevator and ascend to the top (it is a one way elevator).

As you go up through level after level of floors, you realize that there are loooong strands of yarn tied to pillars from floor to floor at all sorts of angles. The first piece is tied to the the 2nd floor pillar right next to the elevator. The other end of that same piece is tied waaaaay up on the 6th floor to a pillar out on the north east corner of the building.

You can only experience one floor at a time, so you only see sections of yarn that are horizontally in your line of sight. What you see is that the line of yarn (that is, only the short section you can see on the floor you're on) starts very close to you (right by the elevator) and "moves" away from you, ending up, four floors later, way out at the north east corner. When you were on the first floor there was no yarn to be seen, and when you passed the sixth floor, there was no yarn to be seen.

You have experienced this bit of yarn as an apparent movement through the building'sspace as a function of yourtravel through the floors (and, incidentally, through time). It was "emitted" on the second floor, and "absorbed" on the sixth floor.

All the while, the string has had no experience of "moving" from floor to floor, no experience of emission or absorption - or of any "time" whatsoever.

Not sure if this is a good one.
Once again, I have no idea what you are talking about. I cannot imagine how this "analogy" has anything to do with whether or not the speed of light is c.
 
  • #17
TimeRip496 said:
Hi guys. I know that light does not travel through time. Is that because its speed is constant for all observer?
TimeRip496 said:
[..] i based it on another thread which gives this analogy: [..] the string has had no experience of "moving" from floor to floor, no experience of emission or absorption - or of any "time" whatsoever [.]
Then, surely what you meant to say is that light does not experience time (if light could experience anything, which of course it can't anyway). According to SR, the closer anything goes to the speed of light, the slower its natural processes proceed according to a "stationary" reference system, and at the limit of the speed of light (which can never be fully reached), its proper time would stop - everything would appear to happen in a single instant (for that object, but not for us). Consequently, you could say that proper time of a light ray is "frozen", or that light does not "experience" time.

That has been derived based on two assumptions, each of them based on observations, and which you mentioned in one phrase:
1. The measured speed of light in vacuum is the same for all standard inertial reference systems (a consequence of the "relativity postulate").
2. This speed of light is a constant, independent of the velocity of the light emitter (the "light postulate")

Special relativity is based on those assumptions, as you can see in the introduction here:
http://fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/specrel/www/
together with the simpler derivation here (equations 1 + 2 are what you refer to with "its speed is constant for all observer"):
http://www.bartleby.com/173/a1.html

Does that help? :cool:

TimeRip496 said:
So we see light traveling through time due to our passage through time? And speed of light isn't c?
We see light traveling through space as a function of time because we are not radiation! Thanks to that we have functional clocks and rulers with which we can set up reference systems to measure "time" and "space".

The one-way speed of light and everything else are the speeds as determined with our measurement instruments, which have been adjusted to our reference system of choice according to convention. This is explained in the second section of the first reference ("Definition of simultaneity"). The subtle but important point is that in practice people could not - and according to the theory we cannot - establish a "true" one-way speed of light; and because of that, we simple "make" the one-way speed of light in vacuum relative to our measurement system equal to the measured two-way speed. And this speed is usually indicated as c. (if you now read post #3 again, you may understand it; I think that it did not exactly answer your question but it's important for understanding special relativity).

PS as a matter of fact, the second reference http://www.bartleby.com/173/
gives a neat introduction to special relativity by Einstein. :)
 
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  • #18
Maxila said:
The space time interval you brought up has nothing to do with it, if you believe otherwise please explain how a light-like interval is related to no experience (travel through) time? Because even that interval has both components of time and distance at its core.

The interval has everything to do with it and is how spacetime distance is modeled in simple mink spacetime.

You are taking what ghwellsjr said to strictly, as I said he could mean any number of things with "light doesn't travel through time". Personally I don't like it (particularly because he said it does travel through space), but he did "qualify" it with the comment after; referring to the difficulty of pairing simultaneous timed clocks and then moving one of those clocks to the "finish line" while still maintaining the timing between the clocks & having an accurate measure of the length traveled, and issue of moving through spacetime, no need to separate the two dimensions as mutually exclusive and actually is wrong.

you said
Maxila said:
. If you meant from the perspective of a photon, since it doesn't experience time it cannot experience space (separation), in that context they are non-existent and therefore such a concept (travel through space without time) is nonsensical.

For the underlined part, strictly speaking you are right, and it was it doesn't makes sense to say what you said, it makes perfect sense to say light (speed) is a null interval.

yes that interval has both "components at its core", that is not the interesting part. The interesting part is they (time/space) are perfectly balanced and that it is invariant. That doesn't mean space and time are non existent, it means the interval is null. If only it would make physical sense to ask "What would the photon measure?" Since it doesn't we could just look at different boosts at increasing speeds, calculate the resulting interval and eventually see at c, [PLAIN]http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/6/6/0/6602be59bc8c0b4a73716ac3e62afa31.png[/I].

It's fine to intuit what the photon may experience, that is no space, no time. It's fine to say if a photon could carry a clock it would read zero and that's because it's clock would have no length in direction of motion so the clock doesn't even exist in that direction and even if it did it wouldn't matter because the ruler that the photon has to measure length has no length in that direction of motion...or we could say it's a light like/null interval.
6602be59bc8c0b4a73716ac3e62afa31.png


That could be said as independent of comparative measures of length and time every observer measures a photon to have a null interval. independent of the variance in measures of length and time. Seems it doesn't matter what one measures for the distance through space and through time that a photon travels we all calculate the same rate of c, note we live in a continuum with a maximum "rate" of c.
 
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  • #19
TimeRip496 said:
What do you mean by no frame of reference of light? Forgive me as I just started this.
The "reference frame of X" is a frame where X is at rest. There is no such frame for light.
 
  • #20
Maxila said:
ghwellsjr said:
Light travels through space not through time.
How can anything travel through space without the passage of time?
I don't understand why you have taken offense at my post. If you had read the whole thing you would have seen that I specifically addressed your concern. I said that you have to measure the round trip distance that light takes going to and from a mirror and you have to measure the time interval that it takes for the light to travel that total distance and from that you can calculate an "average" speed.

Maxila said:
Any observer who can see a photon travel through space will always be able to also account for a passage of time.
No observer can see a photon traveling through space and thereby account for the passage of time it takes for the photon to get from one point to another. As I said in my first post, we define the speed of the photon (a one-way propagation of light) to be the same as the measured two-way speed of light in any Inertial Reference Frame. This is a matter of definition, not a matter of observation.

Maxila said:
If you meant from the perspective of a photon, since it doesn't experience time it cannot experience space (separation), in that context they are non-existent and therefore such a concept (travel through space without time) is nonsensical.
The OP said "light does not travel through time". I was agreeing with him.

You should look up the definition of "travel". That's what I was addressing. Things that travel, change their location and if you want to know the "average" speed, then you have to measure both the total distance traveled and the total time taken. I already said all this. Please read my post thoroughly before you react out of context to one sentence.
 
  • #21
ghwellsjr said:
I don't understand why you have taken offense at my post. If you had read the whole thing you would have seen that I specifically addressed your concern.

I read the entire post, I did not take offense to it, I wanted your clarification because I see that sentence and the latter explanation as contradictory. I still don’t know what you mean, or why you stated, “Light travels through space not through time.”?

No observer can see a photon traveling through space and thereby account for the passage of time it takes for the photon to get from one point to another

You are right; my sentence was horribly constructed and indicated an impossibility. I wanted to reiterate that light could not travel through space without a passage of time

The OP said "light does not travel through time". I was agreeing with him

Things that travel change their location and if you want to know the "average" speed, then you have to measure both the total distance traveled and the total time taken. I already said all this. Please read my post thoroughly before you react out of context to one sentence.

You should look up the definition of "travel".

Here it is: http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/travel


Again, I did read the entire post; It is an axiom of the most obvious order that any change of location is coincident with a change in time, Relativity has shown us they are not separable, therefore changing “location” “travel through space” is tantamount to changing location in time. You are still implying some separation exists between them (space and time) by saying “light does not travel through time”.

We can try to play semantics with the word “travel” but clearly part of its definition (from above) is, “b(1): to go as if bytraveling:pass<the newstraveled fast>”, meaning a change or passage of time. So we come back to the statement which implies a contradiction with the example (traveling in space but not time). Perhaps you erred as I had in my post, making a poor choice of words, I am asking for clarification?
 
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  • #22
Maxila said:
I read the entire post, I did not take offense to it, I wanted your clarification because I see that sentence and the latter explanation as contradictory. I still don’t know what you mean, or why you stated, “Light travels through space not through time.”?
There are some people who like to state that everything is moving through some combination of both space and time. For example, in this thread at post #10:
Quds Akbar said:
Think of it this way, space and time are "linked" together, they form space-time, if you are not moving through space(remaining completely still), you move through time.
...
There is a book about this called "The Fabric of the Cosmos", there are also documentaries based on the book with the author himself as the host, you can watch them online and they are very helpful.
The author of this book, Brian Greene, causes much confusion by the promotion of his ideas and I believe they are more of a hindrance than helpful. Motion (or moving, or traveling) is a change in distance over a period of time. What does it mean to say that something is moving or traveling through time? Is it a change in time over a period of time?

Maxila said:
You are right; my sentence was horribly constructed and indicated an impossibility. I wanted to reiterate that light could not travel through space without a passage of time
You didn't need to reiterate that, I already stated that in my first post.

Maxila said:
Maxila said:
Again, I did read the entire post; It is an axiom of the most obvious order that any change of location is coincident with a change in time, Relativity has shown us they are not separable, therefore changing “location” “travel through space” is tantamount to changing location in time.

There's no such thing as "location in time". Location is exclusive to space. Time is not space. They are separate kinds of things. We don't conflate them.

Maxila said:
You are still implying some separation exists between them (space and time) by saying “light does not travel through time”.

Then I'm glad I said it. There is a separation between time and space.

Maxila said:
We can try to play semantics with the word “travel” but clearly part of its definition (from above) is, “b(1): to go as if bytraveling:pass<the newstraveled fast>”, meaning a change or passage of time. So we come back to the statement which implies a contradiction with the example (traveling in space but not time). Perhaps you erred as I had in my post, making a poor choice of words, I am asking for clarification?
Things travel through space over a period of time. Light, in particular, is defined to travel at the constant speed, "c", in any Inertial Reference Frame (IRF), so if you know the distance interval between two locations at which the light was present, you know the time interval it took for the light to get between those two locations. Is that perfectly clear?

By the way, time intervals also apply to things that are not traveling through space according to a particular IRF, like the clock I mentioned in my first post that is used to measure the round-trip speed of light.
 
  • #23
TimeRip496 said:
ghwellsjr said:
Light travels through space not through time. But no observer can determine the speed with which any particular beam or ray of light travels. However, all inertial observers can measure the round trip "average" speed of two beams or rays of light one going from a source to a mirror and one reflecting back from the mirror to the source. The observers have one clock or timer at the source to measure the time interval and a ruler to measure the distance between the source and the mirror. From that they can calculate the "average" speed of the two beams or rays and they will get the same value called "c". So what we do in Special Relativity is define Inertial Reference Frames (IRF's) in which all beams or rays of light travel at c no matter what their directions. This enables us to establish a consistent set of coordinates for any IRF.

Does that make sense to you? Any questions?
So we see light traveling through time due to our passage through time?
We can see the initial flash of light and we can see its reflection some time later in a round-trip measurement of the speed of light but we can't see it while it is traveling. What we can't measure (or know) is what time the light hit the mirror. In Special Relativity, we define that time to be the average of the initial flash and the reflected flash, in other words, it spends half the time getting to the mirror and half the time getting. This is how we define time at a remote location.

TimeRip496 said:
And speed of light isn't c?
What did I say that makes you ask this question. Didn't I make it very clear that anyone who measures the round-trip speed of light will get c and that we then define the one-way speed of light to also be c in any Inertial Reference Frame?
 
  • #24
ghwellsjr said:
Motion (or moving, or traveling) is a change in distance over a period of time. What does it mean to say that something is moving or traveling through time? Is it a change in time over a period of time?

I understand now that you think of time as some enigmatic entity with its own existence, even though that is counter to axiomatic evidence. When the intuitions we grow up with are as strong as those for time, it is difficult or impossible for most, regardless of intelligence or dedication to scientific principles, to overcome and they can’t separate real evidence from intutive belief.

For any direct observation time is always attributable to a common physical phenomenon.
 
  • #25
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1. What is special relativity?

Special relativity is a theory proposed by Albert Einstein that explains the relationship between space and time. It states that the laws of physics are the same for all observers in uniform motion, and that the speed of light in a vacuum is constant and independent of the observer's frame of reference.

2. Why is the speed of light considered a constant?

The speed of light, denoted by the symbol c, is considered a constant because it is the maximum speed at which all objects in the universe can travel. This means that no matter how fast an observer is moving or in which direction, they will always measure the speed of light to be the same value.

3. How does the speed of light relate to time dilation and length contraction?

According to special relativity, as an object approaches the speed of light, time slows down for that object. This is known as time dilation. Additionally, the length of the object in the direction of motion will appear to contract. This is known as length contraction. These effects are a result of the constant speed of light and have been confirmed through various experiments.

4. Can anything travel faster than the speed of light?

According to the theory of special relativity, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light in a vacuum. This is often referred to as the cosmic speed limit. While there have been some claims of particles traveling faster than light, they have not been able to be replicated and are not accepted by the scientific community.

5. How does special relativity impact our understanding of the universe?

Special relativity has greatly impacted our understanding of the universe by providing a framework for understanding the relationship between space and time. It has also led to the development of other theories, such as general relativity, which have further expanded our understanding of the universe. Special relativity has also been confirmed through numerous experiments and has become a fundamental principle in modern physics.

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