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Dale
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No. By the Lorentz transform we have:Leepappas said:for these two points
Point 1: (0,0)
Point 2: (a,0)
We have:
##0 = \gamma(0- va)##
##\Delta t’=\gamma(0-va)##
No. By the Lorentz transform we have:Leepappas said:for these two points
Point 1: (0,0)
Point 2: (a,0)
We have:
##0 = \gamma(0- va)##
I will place the origin of the primed coordinate system in that point. So the initial conditions areLeepappas said:TL;DR Summary: SR just doesn't make sense.
Consider the Lorentz transformations with c=1, and consider any point in space whose x coordinate isn't zero, starting from
##t_{inital }= t'_{inital }=0##
You need to adapt this formula to the changed initial conditions.Leepappas said:##t' =\gamma (t-xv)##
If the change in ##\Delta t## is zero, then how can time pass in another inertial reference frame?Dale said:No. By the Lorentz transform we have:
##\Delta t’=\gamma(0-va)##
The two events are simultaneous in one frame, but not in the other frame.Leepappas said:If the change in ##\Delta t## is zero, then how can time pass in another inertial reference frame?
The following tells me you have not understood the relativity of simultaneity:Leepappas said:Since that old thread I have familiarized myself with the relativity of simultaneity
That ##\Delta t’## is non-zero for events with ##\Delta t = 0## is the relativity of simultaneity. Two events that are simultaneous in the unprimed frame are not simultaneous in the primed frame. What you have just done is to derive an expression for how much they differ.Leepappas said:If the change in ##\Delta t## is zero, then how can time pass in another inertial reference frame?
The real problem.is that you've fundamentally set your mind against relativity. This thread is more about tackling that psychology than about science or mathematics.Leepappas said:If the change in ##\Delta t## is zero, then how can time pass in another inertial reference frame?
The key realisation is that the Lorentz transforms are very closely analogous to rotations in Euclidean space. Rotating your coordinate system on a Euclidean plane can't lead to contradictions because all you are doing is picking a different way of labelling points. You can be sloppy and do it wrong, but that's not the fault of the maths. Similarly, boosting your coordinate system can't lead to contradictions because all you are doing is changing your system for labelling events.Leepappas said:Since that old thread I have familiarized myself with the relativity of simultaneity and Minkowski world lines.
This is something that should be repeated and repeated and repeated and … well, you get the picture.Vanadium 50 said:The universe, alas, is not required to conform to your intuition. You're just not that important.![]()
That is counterintuitive and a contradiction. One moment in time in the unprimed frame, corresponds to an infinite number of moments in time in the primed frame. The relativity of simultaneity is what's wrong with special relativity.Orodruin said:The following tells me you have not understood the relativity of simultaneity:
That ##\Delta t’## is non-zero for events with ##\Delta t = 0## is the relativity of simultaneity. Two events that are simultaneous in the unprimed frame are not simultaneous in the primed frame. What you have just done is to derive an expression for how much they differ.
There is nothing conceptually wrong with relativity of simultaneity. Counterintuitive, perhaps, but that is an artefact of your intuition, which the Universe is not obliged to care about. Contradictory, no - the theory is consistent. As little as there is something wrong with saying that two points that have the same x-coordinate in one frame has different x-coordinates in a frame that is rotated relative to the first. So no, there is no actual logical fallacy.Leepappas said:The relativity of simultaneity is what's wrong with special relativity.
Ok that's counterintuitive. One moment in time in the unprimed frame corresponds to two moments in time in the primed frame.Dale said:The two events are simultaneous in one frame, but not in the other frame.
According to the primed frame the events happened at different times. According to the unprimed frame the primed clocks are offset.
Why can't you see SR is wrong?Orodruin said:There is nothing conceptually wrong with relativity of simultaneity. Counterintuitive, perhaps, but that is an artefact of your intuition, which the Universe is not obliged to care about. Contradictory, no - the theory is consistent. As little as there is something wrong with saying that two points that have the same x-coordinate in one frame has different x-coordinates in a frame that is rotated relative to the first. So no, there is no actual logical fallacy.
You may not like it or be able to make sense out of it personally, but that’s how the world works as confirmed by countless experiments. You can choose not to believe it, but your beliefs would be in direct conflict with empirical data.
The idea that you have found a logical gap in the theory that has been missed by many thousands of physicists over the last 100 years is, quite frankly, ludicrous. In particular as what you say is a known fallacy among students that have difficulty grasping the relativity of simultaneity (and there are a lot of them - hence my forum signature).
Again: Counterintuitive does not mean that the Universe needs to oblige by your intuition. Regardless of how counterintuitive, experiments that test these limits confirm it. The correct reaction is to realize you need better intuition.Leepappas said:Ok that's counterintuitive. One moment in time in the unprimed frame corresponds to two moments in time in the primed frame.
Because it has been confirmed as a better model than classical mechanics by countless experiments. That is what is used to judge, not what you happen to find intuitive.Leepappas said:Why can't see SR is wrong?
Yes. Also one position in space in the unprimed frame corresponds to multiple positions in space in the primed frame.Leepappas said:One moment in time in the unprimed frame corresponds to two moments in time in the primed frame.
That was the response of most physicists when the theory was first created in 1905. It took a decade or two of experimental confirmation for the theory to gain acceptance. Moreover, and obvious in hindsight, the theory is self-consistent.Leepappas said:Why can't you see SR is wrong?
Sure, just like one point in space for the "moving" frame sometimes corresponds to two points in space for the "stationary" frame. For me, on the train, I haven't left my seat -- I've been in the same place the whole time. Yet someone on the ground says I've moved from New York to Washington. Is that a contradiction?Leepappas said:Ok that's counterintuitive. One moment in time in the unprimed frame corresponds to two moments in time in the primed frame.
ersmith said:Sure, just like one point in space for the "moving" frame sometimes corresponds to two points in space for the "stationary" frame. For me, on the train, I haven't left my seat -- I've been in the same place the whole time. Yet someone on the ground says I've moved from New York to Washington. Is that a contradiction?