- #36
stevmg
- 696
- 3
I was a math major but branched into statistics and not relativity. I still didn't do brain surgery when I became a doctor so don't worry.
Actually, all this explaining got me back to Einstein Section 9 "Relativity" where he gives his example of the lack of simultaneity in the moving frame (I guess we call that S') while there is simultaneity in S. He doesn't use Lorentz's equations to show it but just gives us a feel for it by describing it. By using the equations that JesseM alluded to:
(x')^2 - (c^2)(t')^2 = x^2 - (c^2)t^2 (I dropped the y, y', z, z' coordinates) one sees the effect of x' on t' for given x and t. Because c is constant there is a non-linear change in x' with a change in t' which makes any attempt at simutaneity impossible. Holding c as constant and having t as a variable that changes, even without knowing what the Lorentz equations are, it would be impossible to alter the x or x' without non-linearly altering the t and this would throw the t off fourse and appear before of after it should by a linear (or Galilean) approach. In other words, by holding c constant, we alter the t. The x is also altered in S' by Lorentz too which makes it even more complicated. The Lorentz equations were derived in a strict mathematical sense from the assumption of constant c. The gamma correction [SQRT(1 - v^2/c^2)] and all the Lorentz equations are obtained by mathematical derivation from that assumption (constant c, all else change may be variable) [Appendix I, Einstein "Relativity"] and is not a "gift from God." Therefore, one cannot separate the explanation of lack of simultaneity because of a constant c from the actual equations (once derived) as they are equivalent in the logical sense (statement A is true if and only if statement B is true.)
Actually, all this explaining got me back to Einstein Section 9 "Relativity" where he gives his example of the lack of simultaneity in the moving frame (I guess we call that S') while there is simultaneity in S. He doesn't use Lorentz's equations to show it but just gives us a feel for it by describing it. By using the equations that JesseM alluded to:
(x')^2 - (c^2)(t')^2 = x^2 - (c^2)t^2 (I dropped the y, y', z, z' coordinates) one sees the effect of x' on t' for given x and t. Because c is constant there is a non-linear change in x' with a change in t' which makes any attempt at simutaneity impossible. Holding c as constant and having t as a variable that changes, even without knowing what the Lorentz equations are, it would be impossible to alter the x or x' without non-linearly altering the t and this would throw the t off fourse and appear before of after it should by a linear (or Galilean) approach. In other words, by holding c constant, we alter the t. The x is also altered in S' by Lorentz too which makes it even more complicated. The Lorentz equations were derived in a strict mathematical sense from the assumption of constant c. The gamma correction [SQRT(1 - v^2/c^2)] and all the Lorentz equations are obtained by mathematical derivation from that assumption (constant c, all else change may be variable) [Appendix I, Einstein "Relativity"] and is not a "gift from God." Therefore, one cannot separate the explanation of lack of simultaneity because of a constant c from the actual equations (once derived) as they are equivalent in the logical sense (statement A is true if and only if statement B is true.)