Question; two boats travelling on a perfectly frictionless ocean, perfectly flat with no horizon, no stars and a featureless sky, (no magnetic poles either

Moderator: Vraith
Hmmm...if they are moving in precisely the same way [[perfectly "parallel" in every relationship...including that the ocean/substrate is unmeasurable and/or unchangeable]]---probably not. But any and all differences provide at least some portion of measurement possibility.peter wrote: Question; two boats travelling on a perfectly frictionless ocean, perfectly flat with no horizon, no stars and a featureless sky, (no magnetic poles either), there is no experiment that can be performed that can determine their relative motions. True or false?
There is also increase in mass and decrease in length. So it doesn't depend "purely" on the space/time issue as you describe (a description I've never heard before).peter wrote:Here's an interesting way of seeing it: there is no difference between the speed you walk down the street at and the speed of light - it purely depends upon how much of that motion falls into the time part of space-time and our inability to perceive this as the four dimensional reality that it is.
I briefly tried tracking down the source for that, but couldn't find Einstein saying it himself. It's true that the speed of light is invariant, as well as the laws of physics, but nothing else is. Motion isn't invariant. I think 'relativity' is a better term, given how it upturned people's conception of a "fixed" reality where everyone measures things the same no matter which reference frame they're in.peter wrote: The faster an object (appears) to travel, the more of it's motion moves into the space part of the four dimensional matrix until you arrive at the top speed, that of light, where all (?) of the motion is in the space part and virtually none in the time. So far from being relative, motion is in fact invariant - it is everything else that is relative, which is why Einstein didn't approve of the name 'the theory of relativity', he thought it should be the theory of invariance.
If they have relative motion, you can measure it relative to the ships themselves. If they are traveling parallel to each other at the same speed, they have no motion relative to each other, so there would be nothing to measure. If they are spinning, you could measure their spin in terms of centripetal force. If they were accelerating, you could measure their motion in terms of inertia.peter wrote:Question; two boats travelling on a perfectly frictionless ocean, perfectly flat with no horizon, no stars and a featureless sky, (no magnetic poles either), there is no experiment that can be performed that can determine their relative motions. True or false?
Brian Greene's explanation of special relativity:Zarathustra wrote:There is also increase in mass and decrease in length. So it doesn't depend "purely" on the space/time issue as you describe (a description I've never heard before).peter wrote:Here's an interesting way of seeing it: there is no difference between the speed you walk down the street at and the speed of light - it purely depends upon how much of that motion falls into the time part of space-time and our inability to perceive this as the four dimensional reality that it is.
The faster you move in a space dimension, the slower you move through the time dimension.
To get a fuller sense of what Einstein found, imagine that Bart has a skateboard with a maximum speed of 65 miles per hour. If he heads due north at top speed - reading, whistling, yawning, and occasionally glancing at the road - and then merges onto a highway pointing in a northeasterly direction, his speed in the northward direction will be less than 65 miles per hour. The reason is clear. Initially, all his speed was devoted to northward motion, but when he shifted direction some of that speed was diverted into eastward motion, leaving a little less for heading north
This extremely simple idea actually allows us to capture the core insight of special relativity. Here's how:
We are used to the fact that objects can move through space, but there is another kind of motion that is equally important: Objects also move through time. Right now, the watch on your wrist and the clock on the wall are ticking away, showing that you and everything around you are relentlessly moving through time, relentlessly moving from one second to the next and the next. Newton thought that motion through time was totally separate from motion through space - he thought these two kinds of motion had nothing to do with each other. But Einstein found that they are intimately linked.
In fact, the revolutionary discovery of special relativity is this: When you look at something like a parked car, which from your viewpoint is stationary - not moving through space, that is - all of its motion is through time. The car, its driver, the street, you, your clothes are all moving through time in perfect synch: second followed by second, ticking away uniformly.
But if the car speeds away, some of its motion through time is diverted into motion through space. And just as Bart's speed in the northward direction slowed down when he diverted some of his northward motion into eastward motion, the speed of the car through time slows down when it diverts some of its motion through time into motion through space. This means that the car's progress through time slows down, and therefore time elapses more slowly for the moving car and its driver than it elapses for you and everything else that remains stationary.
That, in a nutshell, is special relativity.
Unless I'm badly mistaken the answers here are:peter wrote: If the sun were to disappear we would feel the gravitational effect instantly
why is gravitational information transferred instantly
Yeah, he's pretty cool. I googled that one last night. Now that I'm looking at The Elegant Universe, I found the one I was actually thinking of:peter wrote:(That is a great quote Fist. If only all popular science writing were as clear and lucid as that!)
When an object moves through space relative to us, its clock runs slow compared to ours. That is, the speed of its motion through time slows down. Here's the leap: Einstein proclaimed that all objects in the universe are always traveling through spacetime at one fixed speed - that of light. This is a strange idea; we are used to the notion that objects travel at speeds considerably less than that of light. We have repeatedly emphasized this as the reason relativistic effects are so unfamiliar in the everyday world. All of this is true. We are presently talking about an object's combined speed through all four dimensions - three space and one time - and it is the object's speed in this generalized sense that is equal to that of light.
Yea...umm...wouldn't the "object" have to take up zero space? How would it be an object? I mean..for consistency?? I'm not sure that follows...but at light speed time isn't just on pause, it doesn't exist, right??? So same principle at the other end?peter wrote:So as with the speed of motion through space, there is a top limit to the rate of passage of an object though time, achieved when it attains absolute rest (Z's point about the relatively of motion notwithstanding {although
is not what we are saying here is that all motion is invariant, not relative?})?
peter wrote:The four-dimension problem seems to be the key here; why do we experience the four dimensional entity of space-time as three of space and one of time. Why are they not four indistinguishable (in all but direction) dimensions like the three of space? And if they were - and I think this was the point being made in the book I was reading that prompted this thread - would all motion/stationary states being revealed to us in a single (ie. non-summational) state with he twisting and warping of the four dimensions of reality revealed to us?
Zarathustra wrote:Space and time are different like matter and energy are different. They are two forms of the same thing, inextricably linked, such that one can be turned into the other.
But there was a reality underneath Newtonian mechanics. His equations merely described that reality with less precision. Inaccuracy doesn't make a model an analogy. An analogy is a figurative similarity, rather than literal a description. A mathematical model that matches the evidence is a literal description of reality, not a figurative comparison between concepts. Accuracy in science is thus a measure of degree of experimental verification, not a measure of aptness of an analogy.peter wrote:But there was no corresponding reality underneath Newtonian mechanics, yet it also was able to pass the litmus test of experimental verification for a very long time.
Zarathustra wrote: A mathematical model that matches the evidence is a literal description of reality
[[[SNIP]]]]
Its consequences for the nature of reality are not poetic license, but logical necessity.