- #71
Al68
That's only true in Earth's frame. In the ship's frame, Earth's clock reads less time than the target clock when the ship reaches the target. In the ship's frame, when the ship reaches the target, the Earth twin is much "younger" than the target observer and the Earth twin is also younger than the ship twin.yogi said:The distance should be measured in the proper frame defined by the separation between the Earth and target - there is no motion between these two clocks and there is no time difference between them
I was referring to choosing a second "target" that was at rest with the ship. So the distance between that second target and the ship would be the proper distance in the ship frame, while length contracted in Earth's frame. Then instead of only having a target at rest with Earth and local to the ship at the end, we would also have a target at rest with the ship and local to Earth at the end. And if the second target reaches Earth at the same time (in ship frame) as the ship reaches the first target, the Earth clock will show less elapsed time than the clock on the second target (synched with ship's clock) when the second target reaches earth.yogi said:You can look at it from the traveling twins frame - but the target is moving toward the traveling twins clock so the traveling twin's measure of distance will not be a proper one because the target is not fixed...
Again, your way is perfectly valid, but many people have questions that it simply doesn't address. Like why did we arbitrarily choose to define the distance in Earth's frame instead of defining it in the ship's frame? Isn't the ship's inertial frame just as valid, and wouldn't it be just as correct to define the distance traveled in the proper frame of the ship, resulting in less elapsed time for the Earth twin?