- #1
digi99
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SRT = the theory of special relativity
I can't find for myself what is wrong with this ?
A <---------------------- C x T1 ----------------------------------------> B : system S1 observer 1
A <--- V x T1 ---><----------------------------- C x T2 -----------------> B : system S2 observer 2
At observer 1 a light wave starts in A and arrives 1 seond later over a distance of 300.000 km in B.
Observer 2 travels with speed V from A with the same light wave in direction B.
Observer 2 uses the light wave to meassure the distance between A and B (when the light wave arrives in B, the meassurement ends), so counts the periods, the counted periods
will be lesser (than the measurement for observer 1 in A) because of his higher speed, so the expectation is like in the SRT, the distance and time will be shorter for observer
2, his time goes slower.
So C . T1 = V . T1 + C . T2, so T2 = T1 . (1 - V/C). It fits with the expectation of the SRT, when V=C than T2 = 0, the time stands still. When V= 0, T2 = T1.
In both situations S1 and S2 is the speed of light C, the same value.
But this formula is not the same as in the SRT.
What do I see here wrong (maybe my view of light waves), but if fits in the SRT, seems it (it is clearly visible that distances and times are shorter as the SRT says) ?
I think that a light wave is always the same (independed for speeds of the observers, because of mass = 0) anywhere in the universe ...
I can't find for myself what is wrong with this ?
A <---------------------- C x T1 ----------------------------------------> B : system S1 observer 1
A <--- V x T1 ---><----------------------------- C x T2 -----------------> B : system S2 observer 2
At observer 1 a light wave starts in A and arrives 1 seond later over a distance of 300.000 km in B.
Observer 2 travels with speed V from A with the same light wave in direction B.
Observer 2 uses the light wave to meassure the distance between A and B (when the light wave arrives in B, the meassurement ends), so counts the periods, the counted periods
will be lesser (than the measurement for observer 1 in A) because of his higher speed, so the expectation is like in the SRT, the distance and time will be shorter for observer
2, his time goes slower.
So C . T1 = V . T1 + C . T2, so T2 = T1 . (1 - V/C). It fits with the expectation of the SRT, when V=C than T2 = 0, the time stands still. When V= 0, T2 = T1.
In both situations S1 and S2 is the speed of light C, the same value.
But this formula is not the same as in the SRT.
What do I see here wrong (maybe my view of light waves), but if fits in the SRT, seems it (it is clearly visible that distances and times are shorter as the SRT says) ?
I think that a light wave is always the same (independed for speeds of the observers, because of mass = 0) anywhere in the universe ...