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YouAreAwesome
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- Imagine that Alice is stationary and Bob is travelling at the speed of light away from her to the right. If both Alice and Bob send a light signal towards the other that rotates through the colours of the rainbow each second, and after 10 seconds Bob returns, what are the consequences?
Imagine this question in 2 dimensions, time (t) and distance (x), that is (t,x). Alice (A) is at the origin, x=0. Bob (B) begins at x=c. Thus we have A(0,0) and B(0,c). Both Alice and Bob send a light signal towards the other but let's say the signal changes colour every second by the colours of the rainbow (i.e. the first is red, the second is orange using ROYGBIV and continues to rotate through the colours). When t=0 the experiment begins and each send a red light towards each other. But when t=1 Bob starts moving to the right at the speed of light (c). Alice remains stationary throughout the experiment. At t=10 Bob stops moving right and returns to the left finishing his journey at the origin.
From Bob's frame of reference he only sees Alice's first red pulse of light for the first 9 seconds (from t=1 to t=10). It would seem as though time has stopped for Alice because she's only sent the one signal at t=0 that he received at t=1 and continues to see for the next 9 seconds. He then turns back towards the origin and what does he see on his way back? After 1 second he would see the Orange pulse. That is B(11,9c)=Orange. So I'll write this out in a table.
It seems while Bob experiences a normal 20 seconds of time, he only sees 10 changes of light from Alice, which corresponds to 10 seconds passing for Alice.
First, is this just plain wrong for some reason?
Second, what does Alice see?
I am new to relativity so please excuse any ignorance or misunderstanding, I'm here to learn!
Thanks for any replies.
From Bob's frame of reference he only sees Alice's first red pulse of light for the first 9 seconds (from t=1 to t=10). It would seem as though time has stopped for Alice because she's only sent the one signal at t=0 that he received at t=1 and continues to see for the next 9 seconds. He then turns back towards the origin and what does he see on his way back? After 1 second he would see the Orange pulse. That is B(11,9c)=Orange. So I'll write this out in a table.
BOB'S POSITION (t,x) | BOB SEES | ALICE'S POSITION (t,0) | ALICE SEES |
B(0,c) | Nothing | No need to write all these out | Nothing |
B(1,c) | Red | Red | |
B(2,2c) | Red | Orange | |
B(3,3c) | Red | ? | |
B(4,4c) | Red | ||
B(5,5c) | Red | ||
B(6,6c) | Red | ||
B(7,7c) | Red | ||
B(8,8c) | Red | ||
B(9,9c) | Red | ||
B(10,10c) | Red | ||
B(11,9c) | Orange | ||
B(12,8c) | Yellow | ||
B(13,7c) | Green | ||
B(14,6c) | Blue | ||
B(15,5c) | Indigo | ||
B(16,4c) | Violet | ||
B(17,3c) | Red | ||
B(18,2c) | Orange | ||
B(19,c) | Yellow | ||
B(20,0) | Indigo |
It seems while Bob experiences a normal 20 seconds of time, he only sees 10 changes of light from Alice, which corresponds to 10 seconds passing for Alice.
First, is this just plain wrong for some reason?
Second, what does Alice see?
I am new to relativity so please excuse any ignorance or misunderstanding, I'm here to learn!
Thanks for any replies.
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