- #1
cmb
- 1,128
- 128
Further to the other current thread, I have a different 'don't understand' issue for time dilation. I've thought it over and I might have a slight grasp of 'the answer', but it is still a bit murky for me:
Two space ships of the future pass each other in opposite directions, each traveling at 0.5c relative to some arbitrary point. Each one observes the other to be a spaceship going 0.7c away from them [if my presumption that relativistic speeds add up in quadrature?]. Both therefore see the clock of the other ship running slower than their own.
How can both on-board clocks be running slower than each other?
Two space ships of the future pass each other in opposite directions, each traveling at 0.5c relative to some arbitrary point. Each one observes the other to be a spaceship going 0.7c away from them [if my presumption that relativistic speeds add up in quadrature?]. Both therefore see the clock of the other ship running slower than their own.
How can both on-board clocks be running slower than each other?