Iskandarani
- 15
- 7
Hello everyone,
I'm trying to strengthen my understanding of the foundational principles of Special Relativity. My intuition, like that of many classical physicists, leans towards a concept of absolute simultaneity, where we could determine a universal "now" by accounting for the travel time of a signal, much like we do with sound.
I understand that the constancy of the speed of light for all observers makes this simple picture impossible. Could someone help walk me through the key experimental evidence (like the Michelson-Morley experiment) and the logical steps that forced the physics community to abandon the idea of a universal "now" (and the related concept of a luminiferous aether) in favor of the relativity of simultaneity?
I'm particularly interested in understanding how physicists first grappled with the counter-intuitive consequences of c being constant. Thank you!
I'm trying to strengthen my understanding of the foundational principles of Special Relativity. My intuition, like that of many classical physicists, leans towards a concept of absolute simultaneity, where we could determine a universal "now" by accounting for the travel time of a signal, much like we do with sound.
I understand that the constancy of the speed of light for all observers makes this simple picture impossible. Could someone help walk me through the key experimental evidence (like the Michelson-Morley experiment) and the logical steps that forced the physics community to abandon the idea of a universal "now" (and the related concept of a luminiferous aether) in favor of the relativity of simultaneity?
I'm particularly interested in understanding how physicists first grappled with the counter-intuitive consequences of c being constant. Thank you!