- #36
FactChecker
Science Advisor
Homework Helper
Gold Member
2023 Award
- 8,933
- 4,338
But it will travel along the length of the rod at some finite speed, so there will still be a problem. If your thought experiment assumes an instantaneous motion along the entire length of the rod, then you have assumed away the real-world facts that got us into SR in the first place. You will find that the physical rod (even ideal) has all the same types of problems that light had.OWSOL said:Ok, maybe not yet...
Nugatory, what do you mean by "in both directions", the flat surface is moving towards both clocks in only one direction.
Thank you
Example: the rod is assumed to rotate so that two windows, separated along its length, allow two light beams to pass through "simultaneously". Suppose you start with the rod not rotating. That is one way you can say that the windows are oriented the same initially. Then you start the rod rotating. Does the rotation start at the same time all along the rod rather than traveling down the rod over some time? The only way to tell is if you have "synchronized" clocks at both locations and measure when the rotation starts.
Last edited: