- #1
Lyuokdea
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Was just thinking about this earlier today. Digging through a couple books, I haven't found an obvious statement one way or the other.
GR tells us that light waves move along lines of equal proper time ([tex]d\Tau = 0[\tex]). Furthermore, an observer traveling with the beam of light would experience instantaneous motion from point a to point b because length contraction would render the distance between the two points to 0.
Is this equivalent to saying that light waves exist in a two dimensional projection of the universe, with the dimension along the line of sight being compressed to 0?
The equivalence between the two statements may be of only philosophical importance, but, if correct, it seems to be an easy way to imagine the physics of light.
~Lyuokdea
GR tells us that light waves move along lines of equal proper time ([tex]d\Tau = 0[\tex]). Furthermore, an observer traveling with the beam of light would experience instantaneous motion from point a to point b because length contraction would render the distance between the two points to 0.
Is this equivalent to saying that light waves exist in a two dimensional projection of the universe, with the dimension along the line of sight being compressed to 0?
The equivalence between the two statements may be of only philosophical importance, but, if correct, it seems to be an easy way to imagine the physics of light.
~Lyuokdea