- #106
PeterDonis
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JDoolin said:We may be talking in different contexts, but I want to make sure you realize: no event has a unique proper time.
I agree.
JDoolin said:I see how our concepts differ about events. You think of events remaining in place, while you progress forward in time. I think of events drifting from the future into the present toward the past, while I remain in the present.
I don't have a problem with either of these points of view; however, I'm not sure the first one accurately captures the one I've been implicitly using. The point of view I've been implicitly using is that *nothing moves*: spacetime, all of it, just *is*, as a four-dimensional geometric object. When we make statements about events, worldlines, etc., we're making geometric statements about geometric objects within this overall geometric object.
JDoolin said:True, the worldlines of the falling objects do cross the line x = c t, but always at a point t>0. That event of crossing will remain forever in the future for the observer on the rocket. It will always be something that has not happened yet.
Yes, that's one way of putting it. However, that way of putting it tempts you, as I said before, to say things like...
JDoolin said:Whether something that happens in the future actually "exists" is a metaphysics question
...which is *not* justified, in my opinion. The event of crossing is only "forever in the future" for observers on the rocket; it does *not* remain forever in the future for inertial observers. That's not a metaphysical question; it's a direct logical consequence of the construction of the spacetime, as a geometric object.
Furthermore, it's a logical consequence that is accessible to the observers on the rocket; even though they can't themselves "see" the event of the free-falling observer crossing the horizon, they can tell that there *must* be such an event (and further events after it along the free-falling worldline). How? By integrating the proper time along the free-falling worldline (using *their* metric), and realizing that, even as their "accelerated" coordinate time goes to infinity, the worldline of the free-falling observer only contains a finite amount of proper time (because the integral converges to a finite value as Rindler coordinate time t goes to infinity). But worldlines can't just stop at a finite proper time; more precisely, the Rindler observers can find no physical *reason*, even in their frame, why the free-falling worldline would just stop at a finite proper time. It's not just that there's no catastrophic event there, no explosion, no laser blast blowing the free-falling observer to bits, no "wall" for the observer to run into. Even if there were such an event, the debris from it would have to go *somewhere*--there would be other worldlines to the future of the catastrophic event. In other words, physically, the free-falling worldline *has to have a future* past the last point the rocket observers can see; there must be a further portion of the free-falling worldline that they can't observe.