- #176
JesseM
Science Advisor
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No, that's incorrect. In the stationary frame A it's centered at x=0, and in the moving frame B it's centered at x'=0. It is true that an object which remains at x'=0 in the moving frame (and thus stays at the center of the sphere in the moving frame) is moving at x(t) = vt in the stationary frame, but the stationary frame does not define the position of this object to be the center of the light sphere at any given moment (since this object is not at equal distances from the left and right side of the light sphere in the coordinates of the stationary frame)cfrogue said:Do you understand the light sphere is centered in the moving frame at vt?
Now before you ask more questions, can you please do me the courtesy of answering whether you understand/agree with the points about the relativity of simultaneity I raised in my previous post, like I asked you to? Again:
Do you understand in each frame, the "light sphere" at any given moment is really the intersection between the light cone and a surface of simultaneity in that frame? And that since the two frames have different surfaces of simultaneity, they are not referring to the same set of points in spacetime when they talk about a "light sphere" at a given moment? For example, pick an event E on the left side of the light cone. Then in frame A, the light sphere at the moment of E would contain some event E1 on the right side of the light cone which is simultaneous with E in A's frame. But in frame B, that same event E1 would not be part of the light sphere at the moment of E, instead frame B would say that the light sphere at the moment of E contains some different event E2 on the right side of the light cone which is simultaneous with E in B's frame. So they are each talking about a different set of events when they refer to the "light sphere at the moment of E".
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