- #1
DanAil
Gold Member
- 26
- 3
This topic has been discussed in the past on this forum, however there is one point that seems to be unclear.
One example of the setup is the following:
The universe is at a stage where all the matter is concentrated in a single black hole, except two spacecraft s A and B that orbit it far away in the same plane in a circular orbit but in opposite directions. As there are no stars to be seen, they can not determine if they are moving and consider themselves to be stationary. When their paths cross the first time they reset/sync their clocks. The question is what are the clocks going to show when they meet the second time?
The obvious conclusion is that clocks on A and B will display the same time as the orbits are symmetrical and any time dilation should be the same for both. Some consider this as a contradiction with the Special Relativity as the spacecraft A perceives itself as stationary and the moving clock on B should be running slower, while B expects exactly the opposite.
The answer is that the spacetime in the above example is not flat, so we cannot apply the Minkowski's metric in this case, which means that A and B should be not expecting their observations to be 'relative'. This answer is perfectly acceptable and ultimately the worldlines should be determining what the clocks will display.
The new question: In our universe there is no place with flat spacetime - even if we consider a very small local area. Any two objects A and B moving relative to each other without forces acting on them are actually in a free fall, influenced by some gravitational field. They may be 'falling' towards a planet or a star, orbiting a center of a galaxy or cluster of galaxies. Flat spacetime actually does not seem to exist.
Does this mean that the Minkowski spacetime should be never considered in the real world?
One example of the setup is the following:
The universe is at a stage where all the matter is concentrated in a single black hole, except two spacecraft s A and B that orbit it far away in the same plane in a circular orbit but in opposite directions. As there are no stars to be seen, they can not determine if they are moving and consider themselves to be stationary. When their paths cross the first time they reset/sync their clocks. The question is what are the clocks going to show when they meet the second time?
The obvious conclusion is that clocks on A and B will display the same time as the orbits are symmetrical and any time dilation should be the same for both. Some consider this as a contradiction with the Special Relativity as the spacecraft A perceives itself as stationary and the moving clock on B should be running slower, while B expects exactly the opposite.
The answer is that the spacetime in the above example is not flat, so we cannot apply the Minkowski's metric in this case, which means that A and B should be not expecting their observations to be 'relative'. This answer is perfectly acceptable and ultimately the worldlines should be determining what the clocks will display.
The new question: In our universe there is no place with flat spacetime - even if we consider a very small local area. Any two objects A and B moving relative to each other without forces acting on them are actually in a free fall, influenced by some gravitational field. They may be 'falling' towards a planet or a star, orbiting a center of a galaxy or cluster of galaxies. Flat spacetime actually does not seem to exist.
Does this mean that the Minkowski spacetime should be never considered in the real world?