I think you already agreed that Charlie's t=40 calculation is correct, and his subsequent t=10 calculation is also correct.
Yes, I've done so multiple times. Now that your memory is refreshed, care to actually address what I said?
I think Charlie would be well aware that he changed frames.
In general, yes. But this frame change wasn't incorporated into the first calculation, so if it turns out that's crucial information, his first calculation doesn't apply anymore after his frame switch. It's "overwritten".
That is the only reason he would say that t=40 x=0 was followed by t=10 x=0 in the first place.
Technically correct, but this has not been used in any calculations: all that was used is his change in velocity with respect to Alice.
Of course he could also say that the t=10 overwrites the t=40 but that does not mean the t=40 was wrong in any way.
And I've never claimed otherwise.
So, how about you now address what I said?
In both cases, the t variable represents the time in the ground frame at x=0.
False; this is an incomplete definition. You yourself just called it a frame-dependent quantity; so where's the frame dependence in this description of it?
Let me correct it: the t variable represents the time in the ground frame at x=0,
as calculated, measured, or observed by Charlie.
Even if t=10 overwrites t=40, that does not change the fact that t=40 came before t=10.
Please go back and re-read our "overwrites" discussion; you appear to have forgotten about that as well.
No, not at all. It is special relativity which tells us that t=40 came before t=10 in the case of Charlie's acceleration changing his frame.
Then what was your comment about accelerations about?
The question is what it means for Charlie.
No, we're trying to figure out if Alice is travelling back in time, not Charlie. Or are you suggesting a superluminal form of remote time travel, because Charlie's change of frame instantly makes Alice "go back in time".
And if you are arguing that remote things can travel back in time, but those things never experience it themselves, there's no way to send information into the past that way, and it can never be observed or measured, we're back to the "physically meaningfulness" discussion which you previously bailed out on.
Charlie is the one who says t=40 x=0 was followed by t=10 x=0.
Right, Charlie is claiming Alice travelled back in time.
Alice does not accelerate so she never says anything like that.
What? Where does an accelerating Alice come from? Can you please stick to the topic!
I don't think this is news to anyone who understand special relativity.
Perhaps you should re-read that "arrow of time" article. It seems that none of the scientists involved in the mentioned research area's are understanding special relativity...
Yes, you misrepresenting and ignoring my raised issues is old news.
The change in time was also measured by the DVR recordings.
False, you used two DVR's for that, and had to mix footage of two different inertial frames together. That merely demonstrated that the calculations are correct, which was never in dispute.
Also, the DVR's don't measure, they observe.
It certainly helps to keep in mind that Charlie changed frames when he accelerated.
Erm, obviously?
Of course the t=40 x=0 pertained to when he was in the ground frame, and the t=10 x=0 pertained to when he was in the train frame.
Yep, and thus they represent calculations done in two different frames.
Things like the distance between Alice and Charlie changing by 17.32 light years in one moment do not happen in an inertial frame, but they do in an accelerating frame.
Helium balloons also don't rise, unless in an atmosphere. Doesn't mean any underlying theory or formula changed.
There are no special precautions taken in SR to deal with accelerations: it already handles them fine.
Earlier in the thread you talked about "pseudo forces" when I mentioned length contraction.
Yeah, because you implicitly argued that forces are frame-independent, which they are not. I was merely correcting your ignorance.
So you must think that pseudo forces acted on the whole ground when Charlie jumps on/off the train.
You are really terrible at attempting to think what I must think, because you got it wrong again. In fact, your statement is entirely incoherent: pseudo forces arise when working with non-inertial frames, such as the Earth. If Charlie's jumping is instantaneously, there are no non-inertial frames to consider. And therefore, no pseudo-forces.
It is Charlie's simultaneity changing.
Right, exactly. Alice never travels back in time; it's all Charlie.
What? I thought you agreed those calculations were correct.
You have again forgotten the whole "overwrites" thing.
You must think SR is wrong then?
No, I don't. I think people needing travel back in time is required to make sense of SR are wrong.
Charlie would say it does,
Right, Charlie's calculations do. Never his observations, never his measurements.
It's only Charlie's actions that cause this, and it only happens for Charlie.
Nothing happens or changes around Alice, whether Charlie does his jumps or not.
There can be no impact around Alice due to Charlie's frame-switching, because superluminal information travel is forbidden in SR.
Charlie has to mix frame-dependent quantities calculated in different frames together to get to his result.
Charlie agrees through measurements that Alice's worldline never goed backwards in time.
And if Charlie understands what his jumps does, neither does Charlie.
Alright let's look at row 24. Charlie is in the ground frame, and he sees the clock at x=0 displaying 5.36. The distance between him and that clock is 34.64. So, if Charlie stays there 34.64 more years, he would see the distant clock say 34.64+5.36=40.
Of course Charlie does not have to wait that long to make that conclusion. It is immediately evident from the 34.64 distance, and the time 5.36 which he sees with his eyes.
Weird, all of a sudden you are using a completely different way to calculate things. Why is that?
Congrats, you just closed a case you opened yourself. Now care to actually address what I said?