So, if I provide my calculations you will admit that your Virginia Tech PHD authored paper does not provide proof that absolute time dilation can be established without acceleration?
IF the calculations are correct.
So, if I provide my calculations you will admit that your Virginia Tech PHD authored paper does not provide proof that absolute time dilation can be established without acceleration?
Cute trick considering that for there to be .75/1.25 time dilation ratio between Prime and Unprime, prime has to be moving at .8c relative to Unprime. Twice that would be 1.6c.The "textbook three twins" analysis is flawed, as I said. Here it is:
The author implicitly draws absolute conclusions from this, which is wrong. I extend the analysis thusly:
A fourth "twin", named Tripleprime, has also been moving inertially and eternally wrt his 3 brothers, in the same direction as Prime but twice his speed.
It is true that, according to Unprime, Prime ages more from the time that Triple prime passes Unprime to the moment that Triple prime catches prime. (Prime is moving slower with respect to unprime than triple prime is and thus show less time dilation over the interval.), Though prime still ages less than Unprime.His trajectory is such that he moves past Unprime when Unprime's watch reads 1.25 years (as does his own). When he eventually reaches Prime, what does he conclude? He concludes that Prime has aged more than himself or Unprime!
Generally if you're going to examine where someone went wrong you would not concur with their observations and results.let's examine were you went wrong:
[...]
As to the fact that, according to Tripleprime, prime ages more than Unprimeduring the interval, SO WHAT? This just goes back to illustrate the Relativity of Simultaneity again. Prime and Tripleprime simply do not agree as to how old Unprime is when they meet up.
RJBeery said:Therefore, my statement that acceleration is a necessary causal component of absolute time dilation stands.
I intentionally excluded acceleration. I'm relying on the same logic that the author does, but I involve a 4th "twin". The conclusions drawn from the setup by Prime and Tripleprime contradict the conclusions drawn by Unprime and Doubleprime, therefore no absolute conclusions can be drawn, period. Point being, you gave the three-twin scenario as one in which absolute time dilation occurred without acceleration, and I have falsified it as such. Therefore, my statement that acceleration is a necessary causal component of absolute time dilation stands.
Fair enough, and if I'm wrong I will post my error and admission, but it will have to wait until tonight.
I have to apologize, Neddy Bate. I truly was going to work through your thought experiment but then Tach was let back on the Island and interjected. I'm not convinced that your red/blue army setup is any different from to single observers watching each other with Doppler effects but I'm not sure. If you let me conclude things with Tach/Janus I'll be happy to move back to our discussion...
CONCLUSION: Contradictory observations means that no absolute conclusion can be drawn regarding time dilation in scenarios devoid of acceleration.
Sure. The traditional Twin Paradox offers [apparently] contradictory observations in that each twin claims that the other's clock is running slow. The paradox is resolved when they meet up again due to acceleration.Can you define your term, "Contradictory observations" ?
Setup: Standard Third-Brother Twin Paradox. Three brothers, Unprime, Prime and Doubleprime. Unprime stays home. Prime passes him at T=T'=0 moving at .8c. At T'=T''=.75 yr, Prime passes Doubleprime moving in the opposite direction, back towards Unprime at a velocity (-.8c) from Unprime's perspective. When Doubleprime reaches Unprime, T''=1.5 yr yet T=2.5 yr. This is all from Tach's link and should be incontrovertible.
Conclusion: Can T'' and T claim that absolute time dilation occurred without acceleration?
No!
New Setup: Fourth-Brother Twin Paradox. Four brothers, Unprime, Prime, Doubleprime and Tripleprime. Unprime stays home. Prime passes him at T=T'=0 moving at .8c. At T'=T''=.75 yr, Prime passes Doubleprime moving in the opposite direction, back towards Unprime at a velocity (-.8c) from Unprime's perspective.
Also, Tripleprime passes Unprime at T=T'''=1.25 yr moving at .9756c* in the same direction as Prime.
When Doubleprime reaches Unprime, T''=1.5 yr yet T=2.5 yr, as before.
However, analyzing things from Prime's perspective it is Unprime that is moving at (-.8c)
while Tripleprime is approaching at .8c!
RJBeery said:Also, Tripleprime passes Unprime at T=T'''=1.25 yr moving at .9756c* in the same direction as Prime.
(You don't have to do it this way but the conclusion is the same.) This allows us to calculate the Prime's simultaneity of the meeting of Unprime, Tripleprime and himself as
T = T''' = 1.25 yr = T'$$\sqrt{1-(.8)^2} $$ = 2.08 yr, with Tripleprime reaching Prime in another 2.08 yrs for a co-location time of T' = 4.166 yrs and T''' = 2.5 yrs.
RESULT: T = 2.5yrs, T'' = 1.5 yrs and they conclude that T "absolutely" aged less than T'. However, T' = 4.166 yrs, T''' = 2.5 yrs and they conclude that T' "absolutely" aged less than T.
CONCLUSION: Contradictory observations means that no absolute conclusion can be drawn regarding time dilation in scenarios devoid of acceleration. Therefore, my statement that acceleration is a necessary causal component of absolute time dilation stands.
Absolute time dilation refers to that which cannot be denied by a change in measuring frame. Absolute time dilation is able to be determined, for example, when the twins meet up again after one of them accelerates and they are co-located for a second time. You apparently understood this term when I made the following statement:1. "Absolute time dilation"? What is this? Did you make up this term?
RJBeery said:So, if I provide my calculations you will admit that your Virginia Tech PHD authored paper does not provide proof that absolute time dilation can be established without acceleration?
Well...the calculations are correct.Tach said:IF the calculations are correct.
This is incorrect, this would give Tripleprime a velocity of .0986c. We're switching to Prime's frame, which necessitates a shift of -.8c. You got the negative on the numerator correct but neglected it in the denominator. The correct relative velocity of Tripleprime from Prime's perspective isTach said:So, according to your logic, Tripleprime speed wrt Unprime is -.9756c and its speed wrt Prime is :
$$\frac{0.9756-0.8}{1+0.9756.0.8}$$
since Prime and Tripleprime, according to you, move in the same direction.
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Not that it matters much but I thought I'd point out the gross errors.
Absolute time dilation refers to that which cannot be denied by a change in measuring frame. Absolute time dilation is able to be determined, for example, when the twins meet up again after one of them accelerates and they are co-located for a second time. You apparently understood this term when I made the following statement:
We're switching to Prime's frame, which necessitates a shift of -.8c.
$$\frac{0.9756-0.8}{1+0.9756*(-0.8)} = .8c$$
as I said. My math has no errors, "gross" or otherwise.
Now, will you adhere to our agreement?
The only thing you did right was to take Prime's speed wrt Unprime as 0.8c. The rest is total rubbish.My math had no errors,
what does the Third Brother scenario illustrate which the original Twin Paradox does not?
RJBeery said:I'm relying on the same logic that the author does, but I involve a 4th "twin". The conclusions drawn from the setup by Prime and Tripleprime contradict the conclusions drawn by Unprime and Doubleprime,
Tach said:...only because you didn't do any calculations. Do the calculations and you'll manage to prove yourself wrong.
RJBeery said:So, if I provide my calculations you will admit that your Virginia Tech PHD authored paper does not provide proof that absolute time dilation can be established without acceleration?
Are you going to claim that, with proper calculations, the conclusions drawn by Unprime and Doubleprime will be in agreement with those drawn by Prime and Tripleprime? If so, what conclusions would those be, specifically?Tach said:IF the calculations are correct.
OK, I'll take the time to respond to your entire post on the condition that you adhere to our agreement. Refresher for you:
RJBeery said:This allows us to calculate the Prime's simultaneity of the meeting of Unprime, Tripleprime and himself as
T = T''' = 1.25 yr = T'$$\sqrt{1-(.8)^2} $$ = 2.08 yr
Are you going to claim that, with proper calculations, the conclusions drawn by Unprime and Doubleprime will be in agreement with those drawn by Prime and Tripleprime? If so, what conclusions would those be, specifically?
I'll get to the math in a bit. I want to make sure that there's a point before I spend the time, however.
RJBeery said:This allows us to calculate the Prime's simultaneity of the meeting of Unprime, Tripleprime and himself as
T = T''' = 1.25 yr = T'$$\sqrt{1-(.8)^2} $$ = 2.08 yr
Are you going to claim that, with proper calculations, the conclusions drawn by Unprime and Doubleprime will be in agreement with those drawn by Prime and Tripleprime? If so, what conclusions would those be, specifically?