- #71
JesseM
Science Advisor
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OK, I already commented on post #3 in my own post #37, and I have no disagreement with what HallsofIvy says in post #4.JM said:I meant 3 and 4, where 4 is by Halls.
No, that's where the relativity of simultaneity comes in--the two frames disagree about what distant clocks read "at the same time" that the two clocks at the origins are passing each other and both read 0. In the K frame, all the K clocks read 0 "at the same time" that the clocks at the origin are next to each other reading 0, but all the k clocks are out-of-sync with one another and only the one at the origin reads 0. In the k frame, the reverse is true--all the k clocks read 0 "at the same time" that the clocks at the origin are next to each other reading 0, but all the K clocks are out-of-sync with one another and only the one at the origin reads 0. It may help to take a look at the diagrams I drew up in this thread, showing two rulers with clocks attached at regular intervals moving past one another at relativistic speeds, with all the clocks on a given ruler being synchronized in that ruler's rest frame but out-of-sync in the other ruler's rest frame.JM said:Following up the 'dimensions' question: Since the clocks of K and k are all set to zero when the axes origins coincide, and time is measured in seconds for both K and k, doesn't that mean that the clocks of K and k are always in synch?
No.JM said:Does an observer ever see his own time dilated or his own dimensions contracted?
Yes, K's time is dilated from the perspective of the k frame, in K's own rest frame his clocks are running normally.JM said:Doesnt saying that K's time is dilated and his length shortened mean that the view taken is k's?