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AnssiH
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First of all, browsing this forum, I feel that the level of competence regarding theory of relativity is higher than on average science forums. It may not be much to say, but the only reason I want to post here is because I believe criticism and comments might actually come from people who KNOW what they are talking about. In other words, People who usually do most of the arguing regarding theory of relativity, seem to be the ones who have very vague idea about what the theory actually means and describes. This includes both pro and anti-relativists, and I don't wish to be associated with either group :)
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I find that ontological interpetations of Einstein's theory of relativity are incredibly sparse, while the mathemathical expressions are abound. As always, the ontological nature of the theory does not readily reveal itself from mathematical expressions. Incidentally, I find that the collective understanding of such key concepts as the relativity of simultaneity is very poor.
This could be suprising, being that Einstein himself made it very clear how important the relativity of simultaneity is in making the theory actually work. But then, surely Einstein's incredibly poor choice of words in his famous thought experiment involving railway embankment and a moving train have contributed to this misconception:
About Relativity Of Simultaneity by Einstein - See section 9
Einstein makes it sound as if he is simply talking about how the lighting flashes are not SEEN simultaneously due to their limited propagation speed. Had the text not been written by Einstein, I'd claim writer didn't understand the relativity of simultaneity.
I mean;
"...he is hastening towards the beam of light coming from B, whilst he is riding on ahead of the beam of light coming from A"
Sound rather much like someone is describing an emitter theory. While the above IS what happens from the point of view of the embankment, it is very easy to get the wrong impression.
Incidentally, this idea about how different things are SEEN at different times I find to be to most common misconception about the relativity of simultaneity. I have even seen TV-documentaries that convey this same erroneous idea about how "special relativity talks about how things visually appear".
It should not be such a difficult idea to communicate, that the "very own speed of light" of every moving observer necessitates that a single beam of light could not begin its journey at the same moment for every observer. This would have been easier for everyone to see in a version of the train thought experiment, where the beams of light, the standing observer and the moving observer all meet in the midpoint simultaneously. Once you puzzle it out, the fact that in Einstein's version the moving observer moves away from the midpoint while the rays of light are propagating has NOTHING to do with the relativity of simultaneity, contrary to what most people would pick from Einstein's most confusing choice of words.
Anyhow, since it has been established that the isotropy of speed of light requires that the actual moments when beams of light begin their journey undergo a transformation, which must occur in an actual time dimension which holds in itself all the events of the world, this seems to imply some things I never hear people discuss about anywhere. Yet they are perhaps the most important things to grasp about Special Relativity. At least in an ontological sense. (Of course ontology doesn't mean anything to mathemathicians, but it should to the physicists, and it definitely does to all the rest of us :)
And since I don't really hear anyone talk about these things, I must wonder if there exists better interpetations (if so, haven't heard of those either). In other words, these are the ontological implications I've simply come to realize myself.
Determinism in Special Relativity:
Since the relativity of simultaneity is a key element in SR, then accepting SR also means we are accepting that the events that lie in our future, have already happened from the point of view of other objects. Namely, objects that are moving towards us fast enough and/or are distant enough. And thus every event in our future must be pre-determined. Rather problematic, but not an impossible idea. (Actually I expect determinism even without SR, but that's another issue and is not due to future already having happened from some perspective)
Things moving back in time routinely:
People usually have some sort of grasp about time slowing down in theory of relativity, but when you mention things moving routinely forwards and backwards in time, you often get an outcry; "Theory of relativity claims no such thing!". But of course it does, since simultaneity is relative.
Let there be two observers "at rest", RED and BLUE.
Blue shoots a beam of light towards Red.
While the light is on its way, Red will change direction away from Blue.
http://www.saunalahti.fi/anshyy/PhysicsForums/Simultaneity01.jpg
(Vertical axis is time, horizontal is location. The planes of simultaneity are black/grey, light is faint yellow -> speed of light is in 45 degree angle)
The POV of RED:
Even though the beam of light was well on its way BEFORE Red changed its direction, AFTER changing direction the light suddenly had not even began its journey.
http://www.saunalahti.fi/anshyy/PhysicsForums/Simultaneity02.jpg
While this is a bit problematic philosophically (especially since there is no actual mechanic to explain it in the theory, rather it is derived as a necessity to the 2nd postulate), I guess there's no reason to think it is impossible. After all, there is nothing with which we could have ever directly see/experience this effect. But this does lead me to a worrying observation about SR, which doesn't really reveal itself in the math expressions.
In the above example the Red did, in a sense, "hasten away from the beam of light". Even if the beam of light was just 2 seconds away from hitting the Red at the moment of acceleration, after the acceleration it can take a lot longer than 2 seconds for the beam of light to arrive. In this particular example, the two seconds would become about 5 seconds as measured by the Red itself (and about 7 from the POV of blue). But even then we can say that the SPEED of the beam stayed constant, since we assert that the moment when the light began its journey changed. This is basically what Lorentz-transformation does in SR, it adjusts moments of events in such manner that we can always interpetate the speed of light as C relative to ourself.
So superficially, the Red could either decide he was indeed hasting away from the light, or he could decide to use the constant C to derive the actual moment of shooting and thus conclude the shooting took place much later than what the Blue is claiming. (Of course we should expect differences in details between different theories, yet the above should be understood about the nature of Lorentz-transformation)
On top of the above, there are still issues I haven't been able to interpetate ontologically at all, nor have I found anyone even mentioning such scenarios. I wish to present these problems here, in case someone knows some solutions outright:
Two rotating wheels on shared axis.
I believe it has been established that the circumference of a rotating wheel, and thus the whole wheel, does in fact Lorentz contract in SR, when observed from the center:
http://freeweb.supereva.com/solciclos/gron_d.pdf
This is problematic in the case when there are two wheels that are rotating in separate directions on a shared axis. According to SR, both the POV of either wheel, the other should be smaller. In other words, both wheels could push sticks from their circumference so that the sticks completely encircle the other. This does not seem logically possible in any kind of interpetation of SR that I can conceive.
Obviously this is NOT the same case as two trains passing each others, in which case it is quite trivial to demonstrate how "both of the trains are shorter than the other", due to the relativity of simultaneity. As oppose to the passing trains, in the case of two wheels there is nothing passing anything in the direction of radius; there in fact exists no point in time when any outermost element of the circumference of either wheel actually exists within or outside the radius of the other wheel. In other words, we cannot really choose any moment in time when one wheel could be smaller than the other. So I'm at total loss here.
Co-accelerating spaceships
In my opinion, this displays particularly well my struggling with the second postulate of SR:
Two identical spaceships which are at rest, perform identical acceleration events to identical direction, beginning simultaneously, as seen below:
http://www.saunalahti.fi/anshyy/PhysicsForums/Simultaneity03.jpg
(Red ones are the space ships. Right one will be called the ship in front (since ships will be moving in line to the right). Blue one is an observer who stays at rest. The acceleration event is instantaneous here, but we will add real-world acceleration into the pile soon)
From the POV of FRONT SHIP:
As the front ship changes its direction, so does the rear ship. However immediately after changing direction, the ship on the rear MUST have gone back in time and not begin its acceleration in a while. (As is seen from the plane of simultaneity, in black)
From the POV of the REAR SHIP:
Vice versa happens. Immediately after the acceleration, the front ship MUST jump forward in time, and now "has been moving" for a while already.
Due to this, while the distance between the ships stays constant from the POV of the blue observer (as he would expect since the ships go through identical acceleration procedure), from the POV of the ships the distance should increase:
http://www.saunalahti.fi/anshyy/PhysicsForums/Simultaneity04.jpg
Even though they did go through the same acceleration procedure, after the fact these procedures exist in different moments in time.
But we should arrive at the same conclusion even if there is a steel rod between the ships. Thus making it appear that we should expect any fast-moving object to be Lorentz-contracted ONLY if it is the observer itself has changed direction from "rest". If an external object accelerates, then we should expect it to experience stretching by the same mechanic that usually causes contraction, and thus remain at constant length from the POV of the observer.
Very confusing, but that's not even the real bastard problem yet.
The acceleration occurs instantly in the diagram, but if you will, please imagine little curves there in the place of the sharp corners, as would actually be the case. This doesn't actually remove the above problem, as you can surely imagine, but rather it reveals the whole magnitude of the problem;
When the front ship begins it's acceleration, the rear ship begins identical acceleration. Since the acceleration event is identical, the ships should basically preserve their mutual conception of simultaneity at all times (since they would be co-moving at all times). In other words the ships & the rod should keep their length from their own perspective, and contract from the perspective of the blue observer.
But the second postulate also very concretely requires that, for example, the rear ship must move backwards in time from the POV of the front ship during acceleration. If we assert it doesn't go back in time, then it becomes very trivial to demonstrate that light didn't move at the speed C relative to the observer by sending light signals from one ship to the other just before launch.
So from the POV of the front ship, the rear ship would need to meet two mutually contradicting requirements; stay in the same inertial coordination system with the front ship (co-accelerate), and stay at "launch pad" longer than the front ship.
And vice versa for the ship on the rear.
I hope someone is able to point out a solution because this is driving me stark raving mad
--
I find that ontological interpetations of Einstein's theory of relativity are incredibly sparse, while the mathemathical expressions are abound. As always, the ontological nature of the theory does not readily reveal itself from mathematical expressions. Incidentally, I find that the collective understanding of such key concepts as the relativity of simultaneity is very poor.
This could be suprising, being that Einstein himself made it very clear how important the relativity of simultaneity is in making the theory actually work. But then, surely Einstein's incredibly poor choice of words in his famous thought experiment involving railway embankment and a moving train have contributed to this misconception:
About Relativity Of Simultaneity by Einstein - See section 9
Einstein makes it sound as if he is simply talking about how the lighting flashes are not SEEN simultaneously due to their limited propagation speed. Had the text not been written by Einstein, I'd claim writer didn't understand the relativity of simultaneity.
I mean;
"...he is hastening towards the beam of light coming from B, whilst he is riding on ahead of the beam of light coming from A"
Sound rather much like someone is describing an emitter theory. While the above IS what happens from the point of view of the embankment, it is very easy to get the wrong impression.
Incidentally, this idea about how different things are SEEN at different times I find to be to most common misconception about the relativity of simultaneity. I have even seen TV-documentaries that convey this same erroneous idea about how "special relativity talks about how things visually appear".
It should not be such a difficult idea to communicate, that the "very own speed of light" of every moving observer necessitates that a single beam of light could not begin its journey at the same moment for every observer. This would have been easier for everyone to see in a version of the train thought experiment, where the beams of light, the standing observer and the moving observer all meet in the midpoint simultaneously. Once you puzzle it out, the fact that in Einstein's version the moving observer moves away from the midpoint while the rays of light are propagating has NOTHING to do with the relativity of simultaneity, contrary to what most people would pick from Einstein's most confusing choice of words.
Anyhow, since it has been established that the isotropy of speed of light requires that the actual moments when beams of light begin their journey undergo a transformation, which must occur in an actual time dimension which holds in itself all the events of the world, this seems to imply some things I never hear people discuss about anywhere. Yet they are perhaps the most important things to grasp about Special Relativity. At least in an ontological sense. (Of course ontology doesn't mean anything to mathemathicians, but it should to the physicists, and it definitely does to all the rest of us :)
And since I don't really hear anyone talk about these things, I must wonder if there exists better interpetations (if so, haven't heard of those either). In other words, these are the ontological implications I've simply come to realize myself.
Determinism in Special Relativity:
Since the relativity of simultaneity is a key element in SR, then accepting SR also means we are accepting that the events that lie in our future, have already happened from the point of view of other objects. Namely, objects that are moving towards us fast enough and/or are distant enough. And thus every event in our future must be pre-determined. Rather problematic, but not an impossible idea. (Actually I expect determinism even without SR, but that's another issue and is not due to future already having happened from some perspective)
Things moving back in time routinely:
People usually have some sort of grasp about time slowing down in theory of relativity, but when you mention things moving routinely forwards and backwards in time, you often get an outcry; "Theory of relativity claims no such thing!". But of course it does, since simultaneity is relative.
Let there be two observers "at rest", RED and BLUE.
Blue shoots a beam of light towards Red.
While the light is on its way, Red will change direction away from Blue.
http://www.saunalahti.fi/anshyy/PhysicsForums/Simultaneity01.jpg
(Vertical axis is time, horizontal is location. The planes of simultaneity are black/grey, light is faint yellow -> speed of light is in 45 degree angle)
The POV of RED:
Even though the beam of light was well on its way BEFORE Red changed its direction, AFTER changing direction the light suddenly had not even began its journey.
http://www.saunalahti.fi/anshyy/PhysicsForums/Simultaneity02.jpg
While this is a bit problematic philosophically (especially since there is no actual mechanic to explain it in the theory, rather it is derived as a necessity to the 2nd postulate), I guess there's no reason to think it is impossible. After all, there is nothing with which we could have ever directly see/experience this effect. But this does lead me to a worrying observation about SR, which doesn't really reveal itself in the math expressions.
In the above example the Red did, in a sense, "hasten away from the beam of light". Even if the beam of light was just 2 seconds away from hitting the Red at the moment of acceleration, after the acceleration it can take a lot longer than 2 seconds for the beam of light to arrive. In this particular example, the two seconds would become about 5 seconds as measured by the Red itself (and about 7 from the POV of blue). But even then we can say that the SPEED of the beam stayed constant, since we assert that the moment when the light began its journey changed. This is basically what Lorentz-transformation does in SR, it adjusts moments of events in such manner that we can always interpetate the speed of light as C relative to ourself.
So superficially, the Red could either decide he was indeed hasting away from the light, or he could decide to use the constant C to derive the actual moment of shooting and thus conclude the shooting took place much later than what the Blue is claiming. (Of course we should expect differences in details between different theories, yet the above should be understood about the nature of Lorentz-transformation)
On top of the above, there are still issues I haven't been able to interpetate ontologically at all, nor have I found anyone even mentioning such scenarios. I wish to present these problems here, in case someone knows some solutions outright:
Two rotating wheels on shared axis.
I believe it has been established that the circumference of a rotating wheel, and thus the whole wheel, does in fact Lorentz contract in SR, when observed from the center:
http://freeweb.supereva.com/solciclos/gron_d.pdf
This is problematic in the case when there are two wheels that are rotating in separate directions on a shared axis. According to SR, both the POV of either wheel, the other should be smaller. In other words, both wheels could push sticks from their circumference so that the sticks completely encircle the other. This does not seem logically possible in any kind of interpetation of SR that I can conceive.
Obviously this is NOT the same case as two trains passing each others, in which case it is quite trivial to demonstrate how "both of the trains are shorter than the other", due to the relativity of simultaneity. As oppose to the passing trains, in the case of two wheels there is nothing passing anything in the direction of radius; there in fact exists no point in time when any outermost element of the circumference of either wheel actually exists within or outside the radius of the other wheel. In other words, we cannot really choose any moment in time when one wheel could be smaller than the other. So I'm at total loss here.
Co-accelerating spaceships
In my opinion, this displays particularly well my struggling with the second postulate of SR:
Two identical spaceships which are at rest, perform identical acceleration events to identical direction, beginning simultaneously, as seen below:
http://www.saunalahti.fi/anshyy/PhysicsForums/Simultaneity03.jpg
(Red ones are the space ships. Right one will be called the ship in front (since ships will be moving in line to the right). Blue one is an observer who stays at rest. The acceleration event is instantaneous here, but we will add real-world acceleration into the pile soon)
From the POV of FRONT SHIP:
As the front ship changes its direction, so does the rear ship. However immediately after changing direction, the ship on the rear MUST have gone back in time and not begin its acceleration in a while. (As is seen from the plane of simultaneity, in black)
From the POV of the REAR SHIP:
Vice versa happens. Immediately after the acceleration, the front ship MUST jump forward in time, and now "has been moving" for a while already.
Due to this, while the distance between the ships stays constant from the POV of the blue observer (as he would expect since the ships go through identical acceleration procedure), from the POV of the ships the distance should increase:
http://www.saunalahti.fi/anshyy/PhysicsForums/Simultaneity04.jpg
Even though they did go through the same acceleration procedure, after the fact these procedures exist in different moments in time.
But we should arrive at the same conclusion even if there is a steel rod between the ships. Thus making it appear that we should expect any fast-moving object to be Lorentz-contracted ONLY if it is the observer itself has changed direction from "rest". If an external object accelerates, then we should expect it to experience stretching by the same mechanic that usually causes contraction, and thus remain at constant length from the POV of the observer.
Very confusing, but that's not even the real bastard problem yet.
The acceleration occurs instantly in the diagram, but if you will, please imagine little curves there in the place of the sharp corners, as would actually be the case. This doesn't actually remove the above problem, as you can surely imagine, but rather it reveals the whole magnitude of the problem;
When the front ship begins it's acceleration, the rear ship begins identical acceleration. Since the acceleration event is identical, the ships should basically preserve their mutual conception of simultaneity at all times (since they would be co-moving at all times). In other words the ships & the rod should keep their length from their own perspective, and contract from the perspective of the blue observer.
But the second postulate also very concretely requires that, for example, the rear ship must move backwards in time from the POV of the front ship during acceleration. If we assert it doesn't go back in time, then it becomes very trivial to demonstrate that light didn't move at the speed C relative to the observer by sending light signals from one ship to the other just before launch.
So from the POV of the front ship, the rear ship would need to meet two mutually contradicting requirements; stay in the same inertial coordination system with the front ship (co-accelerate), and stay at "launch pad" longer than the front ship.
And vice versa for the ship on the rear.
I hope someone is able to point out a solution because this is driving me stark raving mad