ESponge2000
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here’s what’s still tricky . Distances are not absolute, time is not absolute, velocities are not absolute , even a directional speed of light is not absolute, even the roundtrip apparent speed of light isn’t absolute unless it travels through no medium. But all reference frames can use SI or can they? What we sent out on the Golden record on Voyager One Space probe is still universally accurate , correct ? Because if there is intelligent life they would be able to model earth and earth at rest and then use our own space-time diagram for calculating lengths and time, right?PeterDonis said:Yes, it would, because "the time showing on Andy's clock when I answered Andy's call" is a convention.
What would not be a convention would be "the time showing on Andy's clock when he emitted the light signal that I receive at a certain time on my clock". But that is not the same thing as "the time showing on Andy's clock when I answered Andy's call". Think carefully.
That's true, this is not a convention, because it's a time at Andy's location of an event at Andy's location. But it's not the same thing as "the time showing on Andy's clock when I answered Andy's call"--the latter is a convention, because it's assigning a time on Andy's clock to an event that is at a different location. Any such time is a convention.
No, it's not an "absolute distance". There is no such thing in relativity.
Not as far as physics goes, no. The physics of how the cop's radar detector works is the same whether the judge accepts your argument or not.