- #36
kweagle
- 9
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PeroK said:..in your reference frame the impact and the sound generation are simultaneous. In other words, you must take the delay in the respective observations of light and sound into account when deciding when something happened.
Exactly. I understand that perfectly, but it seems to contradict some of the notions about relativity and time dilation. Perhaps it is because I do not understand it fully.
PeroK said:If two observers are at rest with respect to each other and a light year apart, and they exchange signals, then these signals take a year before they are observed, but neither observer is "in the past" with respect to the other.
So what you are saying is that a moment in time is the same for everyone no matter where you are, correct? Then how is it that time can pass slower for someone traveling compared to someone stationery? Would that not mean they would be in different moments in time? Again, I understand they will perceive things differently relative to each other due to the speed of light, but they must be in the same moment in the universe.
Janus said:In this case, if he travels to a point 1 light year from Earth ( as measured by the Earth), he will see the Earth age 3.156e-8 sec during the 1.411 sec he measures for the trip. On the return leg he will see the Earth age 63103756.7084 sec while he ages another 1.411 sec. Total amount he ages 2.822 sec, total time he sees the Earth age, just a tad over 2 years.
So even though it takes ~1 light year to reach the destination, he is unable to observe anything during that time? Why is that?