- #36
docroc
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If I understand your question -- and I am not a physicist, only an avid reader of stuff about physics -- I think your concern can be stated basically as "why don't I experience the changes due to relativity while they are happening? Are they real?" The answers to this all are why relativity is so mind-bending.
I think the answer (real physicists can correct me) is that relativity necessitates having different reference frames. Within your reference frame, you are not aware of atoms vibrating any slower or you aging more slowly, because, within your reference frame, they don't. This is why it's so weird! It is also why Einstein's answer to the question "what is time?" is so profound; he said "time is what is measured by clocks." Since the clock on your spaceship will tick at the same old rate (from your point of view in the same frame as the clock) nothing is changing. Ditto for the people left on Earth, within THEIR frame. Thus the laws of physics within each frame remain unchanged.
I personally like PHINDS' explanation best.
I think the answer (real physicists can correct me) is that relativity necessitates having different reference frames. Within your reference frame, you are not aware of atoms vibrating any slower or you aging more slowly, because, within your reference frame, they don't. This is why it's so weird! It is also why Einstein's answer to the question "what is time?" is so profound; he said "time is what is measured by clocks." Since the clock on your spaceship will tick at the same old rate (from your point of view in the same frame as the clock) nothing is changing. Ditto for the people left on Earth, within THEIR frame. Thus the laws of physics within each frame remain unchanged.
I personally like PHINDS' explanation best.