- #36
yuiop
- 3,962
- 20
yuiop said:With this artificial speeding up of the clocks nearer the tail, the radar distance measured at the nose would agree with radar distance measured at the tail. Agree?DrGreg said:No. Radar measurements are made using "proper clocks", not "coordinate clocks" and the front-back-front measurement will differ from from the back-front-back measurement. The attached diagram illustrates why. The time taken by the red signal (measured by the red observer) is much longer than the time taken by the blue signal (measured by the blue observer).
Yep, I agreed that radar distance measured at the back would be shorter than the radar distance measured from the front in post #31, where I was conceding the same point made by Passionflower, with the assumption that we are using unsynchronized clocks. However, do you agree that we could arrange a synchronization scheme by suitable fixed multiplication factors of the clock rates, so that all clocks on the rocket appear to be running at the same rate and so that the one way speed of light is the same in both directions, that the front and back radar measurements would then agree with each other?
Do you agree if we only use the natural proper clocks that we use for radar measurements, for all measurements, that the one way speed of light is not isotropic and the proper clocks will be obviously unsynchronised to the observers on the rocket?
P.S. I assume you are saying that "radar distance" unqualified, is a timing of a two way signal made by a "proper clock" by definition. I guess I will have to qualify the radar measurement made by synchronised clocks as "coordinate radar distance" or something. By suitable adjustments this coordinate radar distance can be made to agree with the ruler length in both directions. Whether this coordinated measurement agrees with something that approximates the proper length of the accelerating ship or even the CMIRF measurement of the ship I am not sure about. One problem with the CMIRF measurement is that a CMIRF that is co-moving with the front of the ship is not co-moving with the back of the ship and vice verse so we would have to define a location for the CMIRF somewhere near the middle of the ship.
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