The direction of the big bang

Doer

Well-Known Member
The points of origin of the light spheres do not share the motion of the train. The points of origin are incapable of motion. They are a point in space. Just because the lady is sitting midpoint in the train doesn't mean she remains midpoint of the points of origin of the light spheres. The train can travel in the preferred frame relative to those points, which means the lady shares the train's velocity if she remains seated in the train.
A point in space is not an absolute reference. Absolute to itself? Meaningless.
 

mindphuk

Well-Known Member
Oh good, I was hoping you could help me figure this out:

I am traveling along a road and you are traveling towards me in the opposite lane. Our relative speed is 120 MPH coming towards each other. There is a Home Depot located exactly at the mid point between you and me at t=0. The distance to the Home Depot for each of us is 60 miles. How much time does it take each of us to get to the home depot?
Since the Home Depot is stationary relative to the road and you are specifying speed relative to the road and each other, it is simple to transfer the mechanics from one frame to the other. Your problem seems to be when speeds are given and the frame is assumed based on the wording of a problem, and not explicitly mentioned.

Let's say that Home Depot is decoupled from the earth, just like a source of light would be. Then the person traveling WITH the rotation of the earth will arrive at the HD earlier than the other person. Yet this is not what happens with light, even though it is decoupled from the earth's rotation and orbital speeds. Let's say this Home Depot blew up. We each will see the explosion at the same time. However, an observer from orbit will see the person traveling in the same direction as the rotation of the earth will see the explosion first.
 

Seedling

Well-Known Member
Since the Home Depot is stationary relative to the road and you are specifying speed relative to the road and each other, it is simple to transfer the mechanics from one frame to the other. Your problem seems to be when speeds are given and the frame is assumed based on the wording of a problem, and not explicitly mentioned.
The 120 MPH is our relative speed. It is a closing speed between us. You have no idea of what component velocity each of us has relative to the road. You only know that the distance between us is decreasing at the rate of 120 MPH. That says NOTHING as to each of our speeds along the road.
 

mindphuk

Well-Known Member
The 120 MPH is our relative speed. It is a closing speed between us. You have no idea of what component velocity each of us has relative to the road. You only know that the distance between us is decreasing at the rate of 120 MPH. That says NOTHING as to each of our speeds along the road.
Right. The road is in a different FoR than each of us. However, what does it matter what the speed relative to the road is unless we are measuring something on the road? If you move us into space, the closing distance is still 120mph and without a road for reference, there is no way to tell who is moving and how fast relative to a non-existent road. The only thing that matters now is that you are moving relative to me at 120mph and from your perspective I am moving toward you at 120mph. You can use the road to make another relative velocity measurement but it still is all relative and absolute velocities is meaningless, you need a reference point to make any velocity meaningful and by declaring a reference point, you are defining the FoR for what we are measuring.


How long are you going to ignore the fact that we have continually demonstrated that real-world experiments conflict with your hypothesis? Michelson and Morley were sure that light had to be tied to some absolute reference, that since it is a wave, it must propagate 'through' something. This is the same proposal you are making, that the light sphere has some absolute, fixed position from where it started so if we move away from that point, it should take longer for the light to reach us, i.e. your Z receiver in the box. However, their experiment, and every single one since then has shown that light does not propagate through anything and is not tied to any spacial coordinates. Experiments have proven that light behaves the same regardless of the frame's motion through space. This means that light speed is the same for all observers. Since your hypothesis contradicts this, then either the every experiment ever done is wrong or you are wrong. Since you haven't produced any experimental data that supports your belief, it can be dismissed as having been falsified. How can you keep disagreeing with this?
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
If you want to measure the speed of light then you need to measure the radius of the light sphere, period!
Alright, here is the kicker dude. Remember that example with lighting striking at the front of the train? The guy on the platform thinks the flash originated exactly M->A distance away from him when A and A' met up in his frame of reference. He saw the light come from there. From his perspective it happened at rest relative to him. From his perspective the flash happened M->A distance from him, therefore he calculates the time it took to get to him and all his measurements make sense to him. He comes to the conclusion that the strike happened in his frame of reference, and that he and the lighting strike were at rest and it was the train that was the one moving.

The lady in the train however disagrees. She saw the exact same lighting strike when A and A' aligned, however she sees it from the front of the train. She measured the distance from M'->A', and calculated the time it takes for light to get from the front of the train to her. From her perspective it happened at rest relative to her. From her perspective the flash happened M'->A' distance from her, therefore she calculates the time it took to get to her and all her measurements make sense to her. She comes to the conclusion that the strike happened in her frame of reference, and that she and the lighting strike were at rest and it was the platform/tracks/earth that was the one moving.

The light sphere originates exactly at the point A and A' align. The man sees A' (the point on the train) move away from the origin of the light sphere. He sees A and the center of the light sphere to be one and the same, and that never changes from his stationary perspective.

The woman agrees that the light sphere originates exactly when A and A' align. The difference however is that she sees A' and the center of the light sphere to be one and the same. She sees point A (the point on the platform) as moving away from the source of the light.

Now who is correct? A, A', and the lightning strike were all superimposed. There is no argument from anyone that that is the reality of how it happened. But what happens when A and A' move apart? Where does the origin of the light sphere go? The answer depends on who you ask. if you ask the man it stays at point A and does not move. If you ask the woman it stays at point A' and does not move. The answer is relative to who you ask.
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
Look, I don't know how to say this any other way to get my point across. If you actually measured the speed of light, then why would you expect to get any other reading besides 299,792,458 m/s? I mean, if you ACTUALLY measured the SPEED OF LIGHT, and light always travels at c, then how is it possible for you to measure something different than c? If you do get a different result then you are NOT measuring the speed of light, you are measuring closing speed. It's like saying you are traveling down the highway in a car at a constant 60 MPH. Some other car on the highway wants to measure your speed (not the closing speed between you and the other car). If that car actually measured your speed they would have measured 60 MPH, regardless of their speed on the highway, or regardless of the relative motion between you two. If they were traveling 60 MPH towards you and they took a measurement claiming to be your speed, and their results were 120 MPH, then what they did is not measure your speed, they measured the closing speed.

So why are you so surprised when you get the same results measuring the speed of light regardless in which direction you take that measurement, and regardless of your motion??? Basically what you are saying is that you are surprised to get the same results when measuring the car's speed on the highway. You are measuring the car's speed and not the closing speed, right?

Saying you are measuring the speed of light is comparable to saying you are measuring the expansion of the radius of the light sphere in my diagram. The radius of the light sphere ALWAYS increases its length by 299,792,459 m/s, creating the preferred frame. Taking a time measurement from the source in my diagram to the z receiver is measuring a closing speed relative to the point of origin of the light sphere. Since the point is incapable of motion when you measure a closing speed from that point you know all the components of the closing speed is the z receiver in motion, because it is impossible for the point to posses any component of that speed. From there I used the Pythagoras theorem to create the equation to know when and where the light sphere hits the receivers. The equation does not lie, and for you to say that it can be any other way is to say that the Pythagoras Theorem is incorrect.
Speed means absolutely nothing unless it's relative to something else. When you say the car is traveling 60mph you mean 60mph relative to the earth.

Lets say we are driving towards each other at 60mph each. All of a sudden the ground vanishes. It pops out of existence along with everything in the universe except for our 2 cars. Now your memory is wiped clear. You have no memory of the ground. You have absolutely no reference point to gauge your speed. You look around your car, and at yourself. You don't appear to be moving. You and the car and everything inside the car appears to be absolutely still. Now you see me coming at you in the opposite direction.

What speed do you determine me to be traveling?
What speed are you traveling? and how can you tell?

wrong again. From your perspective at the computer the light sphere originates in the center of the cube, then the cube moves away from it. From INSIDE the cube you do not see that. This is the exact same scenario from my previous post. From the computer you view the light sphere as eminating from the point A (just like your diagram shows). From INSIDE the sphere you see it as originating at A' (the center of the cube). No matter what perspective you have, the light sphere does not move relative to you.
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
You telling me our relative speed is 120 MPH when I don't know your speed or my speed is the very definition of meaningless.
Why? Any interaction between you 2 can then be calculated. In fact, the "absolute speed" you seem to speak of is the very definition of meaningless. What possible information can be gained from knowing your "absolute speed" in this scenario? If you want to transfer information, or objects, or avoid hitting the car the only thing that matters is your relative velocities. If you want to calculate a distance or a time for him to be at some coordinate on the ground, then you need to know his relative velocity in relation to the ground, which can be calculated from your relative velocity to the ground and his relative velocity to you. At no point, and for no reason, does knowing "absolute speed" provide any helpful information. If you measure the speed of light in your car, and he measures it in his car you both get c. Absolute speed does not exist, and cannot exist. The concept doesn't even make sense.
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
Let me get this straight. I am standing 10 feet away from a tree. Lightening strikes the tree. The earth (and the tree and I) moves after the lightening strike occurs. The tree was at the center of the light sphere at t=0. The earth and tree moved after t=0. Are you saying that as the tree moves that so too does the center of the light sphere? Effectively what you are saying when you say that is that as the tree moves the light sphere travels along with it, to ensure that the light sphere's radius is increasing at the same rate in every direction from that tree. Get real my friend, when the earth and tree travel in space, that has absolutely no bearing on the expanding wavefront of the light sphere in space. The wave front expands in every direction at the same rate away from the point it was emitted, whether the tree is still at that point after the strike occurred or not!!! Ever heard of the Doppler effect? How exactly do you think Doppler occurs if the source always remains at the center of the light sphere?
Yes. That is exactly what he (and I, and einstein, and M-M, and several others in this thread, and millions of scientist over the last hundred years) is saying. t=0 is by definition in the reference frame of you/earth/tree. If it was a meteor flying by just overhead it would be t'=0. t = t' only at 0. After that t' and t have different values. c remains constant for both. Therefore from each ones point of view they see a perfectly spherical light sphere emanate from the point of origin, and it stays in their FoR.
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
Oh good, I was hoping you could help me figure this out:

I am traveling along a road and you are traveling towards me in the opposite lane. Our relative speed is 120 MPH coming towards each other. There is a Home Depot located exactly at the mid point between you and me at t=0. The distance to the Home Depot for each of us is 60 miles. How much time does it take each of us to get to the home depot?
You need to know either your speed relative to the home depot, or his speed relative to home depot. This is not a result of using "relative" or "closing" speeds either. If you want to use your mythical "absolute" speed you still do not have sufficient information to solve the problem. You are implying that using relative speeds has a drawback because it is inherently lacking information. That is flawed and dishonest.

If you disagree please explain how would answer if you were given the "absolute" speed of both cars but not of the home depot.
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
Yea. I'm pretty sure he is just trolling, but it still gives a good excuse to play out all these thought experiments to demonstrate how SR works. It is a tough concept. I spent many hours on the internet and on forums discussing it before I finally grasped it. I was never pig headed and stubborn like seedling is, but it was still difficult to grasp. When you have an intuitive belief so ingrained and someone comes along and turns you on your ear your natural response is to dismiss it as nonsense. But when EVERYONE is saying you are wrong, including the greatest minds of the last century, something else should click and make you say "wait a minute...why am I the only one not understanding this...". I suspect there are a lot of people on RIU that don't fully understand, but will be helped out enormously by all the examples and explanations in this thread.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Yea. I'm pretty sure he is just trolling, but it still gives a good excuse to play out all these thought experiments to demonstrate how SR works. It is a tough concept. I spent many hours on the internet and on forums discussing it before I finally grasped it. I was never pig headed and stubborn like seedling is, but it was still difficult to grasp. When you have an intuitive belief so ingrained and someone comes along and turns you on your ear your natural response is to dismiss it as nonsense. But when EVERYONE is saying you are wrong, including the greatest minds of the last century, something else should click and make you say "wait a minute...why am I the only one not understanding this...". I suspect there are a lot of people on RIU that don't fully understand, but will be helped out enormously by all the examples and explanations in this thread.
It is a tough concept, and I agree it's fun and worthwhile to be challenged about it. I've refined my own internal metaphors thanks to this thread and especially your contributions.
Here's a cool site that illustrates relativistic distortions. For some reason I have a tough time accessing the vid files; maybe you'll do better. cn

http://www.spacetimetravel.org/inhalt.html
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
I enjoyed reading and thinking about your (plural) examples here. This was a new argument for me to witness, which is why I stayed out of it except for describing the smell of bullshit. I found it mostly stimulating, however, in the end all Seedling was able to demonstrate is that he is a denialist.
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
Set and match. Good play, gentlemen.

For the next question:

Matter and Space. Can't have one without the other?
 

Seedling

Well-Known Member
Two cars are traveling towards each other on a road. One car has a speed of 30 MPH along the road, the other car has a speed of 70 MPH along the road. The distance between them is closing at the rate of 100 MPH. Each driver observes the distance between them as closing at that rate. According to SR, does each driver see the same number of meter sticks between them at every point in time? What I'm getting at is, if the distance between the cars in the road frame is 100 miles, and each driver sees that distance closing at the rate of 100 MPH, then all the frames (road, driver a, and driver b) see that distance as 100 miles, and they also see the time elapsing at the same rate, correct?

Another question:

At what rate does the center point of the cars change along the road as the distance between the cars decreases over time? For instance, there's a distance of 100 miles between the cars at t=0. Their center point is a Burger King that is 50 miles away from each of them. In one hour when the cars crash into each other, the car that was traveling 70 MPH is 20 miles past the Burger King, and the car that was traveling 30 MPH is 20 miles short of the Burger King. So the center point was the Burger King at t=0 seconds, and the final center point was 20 miles away from that point at t=3600 seconds. The center point changed at a rate of 20 MPH. Put that into your pipe and smoke it!!!!


...and yet another question:

bb43dfa0-62e5-483f-b748-c96d4af2944e_400.jpg

Imagine the large spring spring as a light wave. The distance between the coils is the Wavelength. The NUMBER OF COILS is the cycles. The speed of light is equal to wavelength times frequency (cycles per second, or Hertz). In the pic assume the long spring to have completed 13 cycles, as the spring has roughly 13 complete coils over the total length of the spring.

As you compress the spring the wavelength gets shorter and the number of coils stays the same, correct?
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
Two cars are traveling towards each other on a road. One car has a speed of 30 MPH along the road, the other car has a speed of 70 MPH along the road. The distance between them is closing at the rate of 100 MPH. Each driver observes the distance between them as closing at that rate. According to SR, does each driver see the same number of meter sticks between them at every point in time? What I'm getting at is, if the distance between the cars in the road frame is 100 miles, and each driver sees that distance closing at the rate of 100 MPH, then all the frames (road, driver a and driver b) see that distance as 100 miles, and they also see the time elapsing at the same rate, correct?

Another question:

At what rate does the center point of the cars change along the road as the distance between the cars decreases over time? For instance, there's a distance of 100 miles between the cars at t=0. Their center point is a Burger King that is 50 miles away from each of them. In one hour when the cars crash into each other, the car that was traveling 70 MPH is 20 miles past the Burger King, and the car that was traveling 30 MPH is 20 miles short of the Burger King. So the center point was the Burger King at t=0 seconds, and the final center point was 20 miles away from that point at t=3600 seconds. The center point changed at a rate of 20 MPH. Put that into your pipe and smoke it!!!!


...and yet another question:

View attachment 2346051

Imagine the large spring spring as a light wave. The distance between the coils is the Wavelength. The NUMBER OF COILS is the cycles. The speed of light is equal to wavelength times frequency (cycles per second, or Hertz). In the pic assume the long spring to have completed 13 cycles, as the spring has roughly 13 complete coils over the total length of the spring.

As you compress the spring the wavelength gets shorter and the number of coils stays the same, correct?
Seedling says the darnedest things...
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
The coils are infinite. If you so call, compress the spring, or really increase frequency, just more "coils" are added in the spaces.

BTW, EM radiation propagation cannot be seen as coils and that's why the simile is not used. It's meaningless.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Seedling, that's a useless question for two reasons:
1) The speeds involved are very slow and conform almost perfectly to the classical/Newtonian limit.
2) The presence of the road intuitively supports the spurious "preferred frame" that is the downfall of your entire hypothesis. You can get away with our intuition of Newtonian mechanics complete with Aristotelian aether at slowest speeds, but in a relativistic scheme that intuition harms more than helps. cn
 
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