- #36
AnssiH
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Line said:SO not only do we not know if light is particle or wave but photons don't have mass? Is this like electrons hwhich have mass but it's too small to matter or it has no mass whatsoever?
In the mathematical descriptions light has got no mass, but it causes a momentum on any material it hits. Ontological descriptions can vary. For example, you can consider inertia to be an emergent phenomenon of some sort, and electromagnetism to be just one component of that.
Also it is not necessarily correct to say "we don't know if light is a particle or a wave". Rather we should say it is neither, but it does exhibit some properties of both. Namely, it appears to move as a particle but all its possible trajectories seem to interfere with each others. I think any reasonable ontological interpretation of the math of QED should probably let go of any ideas about photons with identity. (Although alternatively, a spacetime interpretation of QM effects could say something about why the wave/particle duality might exist; https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=130623 )
In any case, it is not necessary to understand these properties of light to get the idea behind relativity.
And light has no frame for itself? DO we have the right frame? Cause from what I understand we are spinning around the Milkyway Galaxy at the speed of light. And who knows how fast the universe is moving. So just the galaxy moving at the speed of light means that light really moves at twice C.
Well, the thing that Newtonian relativity shows already is that it is nonsensical to invoke the idea of absolute motion. Motion, as a semantical concept, can only make sense if it is expressed as relative between two objects.
Physicists got, again, hung up on the idea of absolute motion when they imagined ether. It would have been pretty odd if space was like a giant backdrop with identity to its locations. And it would have been pretty odd if space was behaving like matter does. There's no reason to assume that. "Empty space" is just one big unnecessary metaphysical entity if you think of reality that way. Better let it go and look at objects as stable constructions that can have motion in relation to each others but not in relation to any backdrop. This assumption does not yet lead to relativity of time, mind you.
(It is not given that the backdrop doesn't exist, but there is no indication of such a thing, and consequently, if you assume it does exist, then your descriptions of the laws of nature and explanations of various phenomena become very complex)
I would just sya B's equipment is broken. Is this real and proven? Is there any use for this?
Well, it is not directly proven. In fact, the logic doesn't allow for direct observation of relativity of simultaneity. It just allows for observation of time dilation. There are time dilation observations that agree with the predictions of relativity, but it is possible to construct models that make the same predictions with absolute simultaneity (they may not be mathematically as elegant, but one can argue that they are ontologically more elegant).
So, we have observed, for example, that objects in inertial acceleration suffer time dilation, and we have some indications that objects in motion relative to us, will suffer time dilation in our frame (cosmic particles with very short life times seem to live longer than expected, which can be explained by time dilation).
Anyway, I would say it is required to learn the ins and outs of the logic behind relativity, before you can hope to see what elements of it are not necessarily set in stone, and how various experiments have been interpreted according to relativity, and what needs to be interpreted differently in other schemes. Any "other scheme" probably must also say something about inertia and gravity (and their equivalence), and it certainly helps if it can also say something about QM phenomena.