- #141
DrGreg
Science Advisor
Gold Member
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I really don't understand what you are talking about here. If none of the cases 1 to 5 are true, then both A and B are being lied to. The only conclusion that both A and B can come to is that they are being lied to and the experiment is a waste of time.neopolitan said:None of the cases.JesseM said:...the only way I can think of to answer this question is to break it down into different possibilities like:
1. Events are colocated in frame A, neither colocated nor simultaneous in B
2. Events are colocated in frame B, neither colocated nor simultaneous in A
3. Events are simultaneous in A, also simultaneous in B because both occur at same x-coordinate in A and same x'-coordinate in B
4. Events are simultaneous in A, neither colocated nor simultaneous in B
5. Events are simultaneous in B, neither colocated nor simultaneous in A
...and then answer what conclusions B would reach in each of the 5 cases. So, could you just specify which of these 5 cases applies? If not, can you explain why you want it to be mysterious?
Both A and B have been told the events happened "together".
Both A and B receive photons from the events with a temporal delay (since they both consider themselves to be at rest, there is no spatial component related to where they receive the photons).
From that they work out that the events have either a spatial "togetherness" and a temporal separation or a temporal "togetherness" and a spatial separation.
"Truth" or "reality" about the timing and locations of events is inconsequential.
I didn't ask for reality, I asked about "what sort of conclusions will B come to?"
cheers,
neopolitan