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Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.Jesse
On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 2:00:25 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.JesseI go by what he writes, not how someone interprets his words. AG
Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.Jesse
On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 2:00:25 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.JesseIf that's what Brent means, how is this related to the breakdown of simultaneity? AG
--On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 3:00 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Monday, January 20, 2025 at 8:56:01 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:Clark posted, and I agree, that the paradox is rooted in the assumption that fitting and not fitting of car in garage, from frame of garage and frame of car do not happen at the same time. AGBut you posted "They do happen at the same time as clearly shown on my diagrams. In the garage frame the entrance door closes before the exit door has to open. The car is in the garage for about 2.5 nano-seconds. In the car frame the doors are open at the same time so the car extends thru both."Please explain this apparent discrepancy. AGGentleman's C. Grade as a teacher of SR. AG--
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On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 8:06 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 2:00:25 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.JesseIf that's what Brent means, how is this related to the breakdown of simultaneity? AGAre you asking about where to find a breakdown of simultaneity in my statement 'if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A)'?If so, in that statement I'm saying that the two frames disagree about which event at the front of the car is simultaneous with A, the garage frame picks an event B on front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is inside the garage and hasn't yet reached the exit, the car frame picks a different event C on the front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is outside the garage, having already passed through the exit. In the garage frame A is simultaneous with B, in the car frame A is simultaneous with C.Jesse
On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 7:10:56 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 8:06 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 2:00:25 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.JesseIf that's what Brent means, how is this related to the breakdown of simultaneity? AGAre you asking about where to find a breakdown of simultaneity in my statement 'if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A)'?If so, in that statement I'm saying that the two frames disagree about which event at the front of the car is simultaneous with A, the garage frame picks an event B on front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is inside the garage and hasn't yet reached the exit, the car frame picks a different event C on the front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is outside the garage, having already passed through the exit. In the garage frame A is simultaneous with B, in the car frame A is simultaneous with C.JesseOK, let's suppose you've identified events which aren't simultaneous in both frames, you still have a car, the same car, which fits in one frame and never in the other. For me this still seems paradoxical even though I agree that relativity allows different frames to make different measurements of the same phenomena such as the B and E fields in E&M. AG
On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 12:41:30 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 7:10:56 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 8:06 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 2:00:25 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.JesseIf that's what Brent means, how is this related to the breakdown of simultaneity? AGAre you asking about where to find a breakdown of simultaneity in my statement 'if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A)'?If so, in that statement I'm saying that the two frames disagree about which event at the front of the car is simultaneous with A, the garage frame picks an event B on front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is inside the garage and hasn't yet reached the exit, the car frame picks a different event C on the front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is outside the garage, having already passed through the exit. In the garage frame A is simultaneous with B, in the car frame A is simultaneous with C.JesseOK, let's suppose you've identified events which aren't simultaneous in both frames, you still have a car, the same car, which fits in one frame and never in the other. For me this still seems paradoxical even though I agree that relativity allows different frames to make different measurements of the same phenomena such as the B and E fields in E&M. AGHere's what I want to know; how exactly do you define the paradox (what it is), and how does the disagreement about simultaneity solve it for you? AG
On Thu, Jan 23, 2025 at 4:28 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 12:41:30 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 7:10:56 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 8:06 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 2:00:25 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.JesseIf that's what Brent means, how is this related to the breakdown of simultaneity? AGAre you asking about where to find a breakdown of simultaneity in my statement 'if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A)'?If so, in that statement I'm saying that the two frames disagree about which event at the front of the car is simultaneous with A, the garage frame picks an event B on front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is inside the garage and hasn't yet reached the exit, the car frame picks a different event C on the front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is outside the garage, having already passed through the exit. In the garage frame A is simultaneous with B, in the car frame A is simultaneous with C.JesseOK, let's suppose you've identified events which aren't simultaneous in both frames, you still have a car, the same car, which fits in one frame and never in the other. For me this still seems paradoxical even though I agree that relativity allows different frames to make different measurements of the same phenomena such as the B and E fields in E&M. AGHere's what I want to know; how exactly do you define the paradox (what it is), and how does the disagreement about simultaneity solve it for you? AGThe paradox is the seeming danger that the disagreement about fitting could lead to differing predictions local physical facts, and the relativity of simultaneity shows how this danger is avoided.
In particular, if we have a version of the problem where in the garage frame both garage doors shut simultaneously and then re-open, if both frames *did* agree about simultaneity this would clearly lead to a conflict. In the garage frame, since the car fits entirely within the garage for a short time, that means both doors can close simultaneously without hitting the car; but in the car frame, since the car never fits entirely within the garage, if both doors also closed simultaneously in this frame, one of the doors would have to smash into some part of the car that was blocking the door frame at that moment (whether or not the door collides with the car is a local physical fact). But with the relativity of simultaneity you can show that if the doors shut simultaneously in the garage frame, in the car frame the right door closes first before the front of the car has reached its location so there is no collision, and then the left door closes later after the back of the car has passed it, so a collision is avoided there too.
Jesse
On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 2:51:50 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Thu, Jan 23, 2025 at 4:28 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 12:41:30 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 7:10:56 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 8:06 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 2:00:25 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.JesseIf that's what Brent means, how is this related to the breakdown of simultaneity? AGAre you asking about where to find a breakdown of simultaneity in my statement 'if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A)'?If so, in that statement I'm saying that the two frames disagree about which event at the front of the car is simultaneous with A, the garage frame picks an event B on front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is inside the garage and hasn't yet reached the exit, the car frame picks a different event C on the front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is outside the garage, having already passed through the exit. In the garage frame A is simultaneous with B, in the car frame A is simultaneous with C.JesseOK, let's suppose you've identified events which aren't simultaneous in both frames, you still have a car, the same car, which fits in one frame and never in the other. For me this still seems paradoxical even though I agree that relativity allows different frames to make different measurements of the same phenomena such as the B and E fields in E&M. AGHere's what I want to know; how exactly do you define the paradox (what it is), and how does the disagreement about simultaneity solve it for you? AGThe paradox is the seeming danger that the disagreement about fitting could lead to differing predictions local physical facts, and the relativity of simultaneity shows how this danger is avoided.How do you define the local physical facts that both frames must agree to? AG
In particular, if we have a version of the problem where in the garage frame both garage doors shut simultaneously and then re-open, if both frames *did* agree about simultaneity this would clearly lead to a conflict. In the garage frame, since the car fits entirely within the garage for a short time, that means both doors can close simultaneously without hitting the car; but in the car frame, since the car never fits entirely within the garage, if both doors also closed simultaneously in this frame, one of the doors would have to smash into some part of the car that was blocking the door frame at that moment (whether or not the door collides with the car is a local physical fact). But with the relativity of simultaneity you can show that if the doors shut simultaneously in the garage frame, in the car frame the right door closes first before the front of the car has reached its location so there is no collision, and then the left door closes later after the back of the car has passed it, so a collision is avoided there too.Does the resolution of the paradox require the existence of garage doors? If you imagine a garage with no doors, does the paradox continue to exist? AG
On Thu, Jan 23, 2025 at 5:55 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 2:51:50 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Thu, Jan 23, 2025 at 4:28 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 12:41:30 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 7:10:56 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 8:06 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 2:00:25 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.JesseIf that's what Brent means, how is this related to the breakdown of simultaneity? AGAre you asking about where to find a breakdown of simultaneity in my statement 'if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A)'?If so, in that statement I'm saying that the two frames disagree about which event at the front of the car is simultaneous with A, the garage frame picks an event B on front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is inside the garage and hasn't yet reached the exit, the car frame picks a different event C on the front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is outside the garage, having already passed through the exit. In the garage frame A is simultaneous with B, in the car frame A is simultaneous with C.JesseOK, let's suppose you've identified events which aren't simultaneous in both frames, you still have a car, the same car, which fits in one frame and never in the other. For me this still seems paradoxical even though I agree that relativity allows different frames to make different measurements of the same phenomena such as the B and E fields in E&M. AGHere's what I want to know; how exactly do you define the paradox (what it is), and how does the disagreement about simultaneity solve it for you? AGThe paradox is the seeming danger that the disagreement about fitting could lead to differing predictions local physical facts, and the relativity of simultaneity shows how this danger is avoided.How do you define the local physical facts that both frames must agree to? AGI explained the concept in a number of posts on the "ATTN: Jesse" thread you started earlier, like https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/xCpbnK-AAgAJ and https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/IENKOmsaAwAJIn particular, if we have a version of the problem where in the garage frame both garage doors shut simultaneously and then re-open, if both frames *did* agree about simultaneity this would clearly lead to a conflict. In the garage frame, since the car fits entirely within the garage for a short time, that means both doors can close simultaneously without hitting the car; but in the car frame, since the car never fits entirely within the garage, if both doors also closed simultaneously in this frame, one of the doors would have to smash into some part of the car that was blocking the door frame at that moment (whether or not the door collides with the car is a local physical fact). But with the relativity of simultaneity you can show that if the doors shut simultaneously in the garage frame, in the car frame the right door closes first before the front of the car has reached its location so there is no collision, and then the left door closes later after the back of the car has passed it, so a collision is avoided there too.
That's exactly what my diagram shows. Didn't you look at it?
Brent
On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 6:03:17 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Thu, Jan 23, 2025 at 5:55 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 2:51:50 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Thu, Jan 23, 2025 at 4:28 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 12:41:30 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 7:10:56 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 8:06 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Wednesday, January 22, 2025 at 2:00:25 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:Brent hasn't chosen to answer your question, but my guess would be he just means if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A). He obviously isn't disputing the notion that the two frames have different definitions of simultaneity since he made this point many times in his comments.JesseIf that's what Brent means, how is this related to the breakdown of simultaneity? AGAre you asking about where to find a breakdown of simultaneity in my statement 'if you pick some specific event where part of the car is inside the garage, like the event A of the back of the car passing the garage entry door, in the garage frame the car is fully inside the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the garage frame definition of other events simultaneous with A), while in the car frame the front of the car is already well past the exit of the garage "at the same time" as event A (using the car frame definition of other events simultaneous with A)'?If so, in that statement I'm saying that the two frames disagree about which event at the front of the car is simultaneous with A, the garage frame picks an event B on front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is inside the garage and hasn't yet reached the exit, the car frame picks a different event C on the front of the car's worldline where the front of the car is outside the garage, having already passed through the exit. In the garage frame A is simultaneous with B, in the car frame A is simultaneous with C.JesseOK, let's suppose you've identified events which aren't simultaneous in both frames, you still have a car, the same car, which fits in one frame and never in the other. For me this still seems paradoxical even though I agree that relativity allows different frames to make different measurements of the same phenomena such as the B and E fields in E&M. AGHere's what I want to know; how exactly do you define the paradox (what it is), and how does the disagreement about simultaneity solve it for you? AGThe paradox is the seeming danger that the disagreement about fitting could lead to differing predictions local physical facts, and the relativity of simultaneity shows how this danger is avoided.How do you define the local physical facts that both frames must agree to? AGI explained the concept in a number of posts on the "ATTN: Jesse" thread you started earlier, like https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/xCpbnK-AAgAJ and https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/IENKOmsaAwAJIn particular, if we have a version of the problem where in the garage frame both garage doors shut simultaneously and then re-open, if both frames *did* agree about simultaneity this would clearly lead to a conflict. In the garage frame, since the car fits entirely within the garage for a short time, that means both doors can close simultaneously without hitting the car; but in the car frame, since the car never fits entirely within the garage, if both doors also closed simultaneously in this frame, one of the doors would have to smash into some part of the car that was blocking the door frame at that moment (whether or not the door collides with the car is a local physical fact). But with the relativity of simultaneity you can show that if the doors shut simultaneously in the garage frame, in the car frame the right door closes first before the front of the car has reached its location so there is no collision, and then the left door closes later after the back of the car has passed it, so a collision is avoided there too.Can the above result be obtained by simply using the LT time translation t --> t' applied to the endpoints of the car fitting in garage from the pov of the garage frame, or is more required? TY, AG
Does the resolution of the paradox require the existence of garage doors? If you imagine a garage with no doors, does the paradox continue to exist? AGYou can define it in any other way that allows you to physically identify specific events on the worldlines of different parts of the garage (like the front and back openings) and different parts of the car (like front and back end of the car), like if you imagine clocks attached to them so you can identify points an a worldline by the readings on the attached clock. And the paradox is about a theoretical situation anyway (we don't have the practical ability to shoot a car through a garage fast enough that there would be measurable disagreements about fit), it would be a fatal flaw for the theory of relativity if any situation whatsoever led to conflicting predictions about local events, regardless of whether it was realized.Jesse
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On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 11:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:That's exactly what my diagram shows. Didn't you look at it?
BrentSure, I looked at it but I prefer text, and I forgot you're a deaf mute. And NO, I didn't know that frame transformations can invert time relations. Let's forget it. I forgot you prefer your riddles. Grade C- . AG
Jesse
On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 4:04 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Friday, January 24, 2025 at 10:41:45 AM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 8:53 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 11:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:That's exactly what my diagram shows. Didn't you look at it?
BrentSure, I looked at it but I prefer text, and I forgot you're a deaf mute. And NO, I didn't know that frame transformations can invert time relations. Let's forget it. I forgot you prefer your riddles. Grade C- . AGThe point that the LT can change the order of events with a spacelike separation is one I also talked about many times on the previous thread, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/knVuCxHFAwAJ where I wrote: "Because as you previously agreed, the question of whether the car fits reduces to the question of whether the event A = back of car passes front of garage happens before, after, or simultaneously with the event B = front of car reaches back of garage. Since these events have a spacelike separation in both Brent’s and my numerical examples, in relativity different frames can disagree on their order, that’s the whole reason we say frames disagree on whether the car fits." Likewise in https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/MwKDuJM-AQAJ where I wrote: "Do you understand that when people talk about the relativity of simultaneity in the context of the car/garage problem, they are referring not just to events which are actually simultaneous in some frame, but also the fact that different frames can disagree about the time-ordering of events with a spacelike separation (i.e. neither event is in the past or future light cone of the other event)? The events A and B I was talking about earlier are not simultaneous in either the car frame or the garage frame (at least not with the numerical values for rest lengths and relative velocity given by Brent), but they happen in a different order in the two frames, and the relativity of simultaneity is key to understanding how that's possible, in Newtonian physics where all inertial frames agree about simultaneity there could be no disagreement about the order of any events."Brent has made this point in the past as well, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/WcxkopmjAAAJ where he wrote: "The facts are events in spacetime. There's an event F at which the front of the car is even with the exit of the garage and there's an event R at which the rear of the car is even with the entrance to the garage. If R is before F we say the car fitted in the garage. If R is after F we say the car did not fit. But if F and R are spacelike, then there is no fact of the matter about their time order. The time order will depend on the state of motion."Did you really not remember any of these discussions, or did you just misunderstand the meaning of "invert time relations" to be something different than the idea that two events A and B with a spacelike separation can have a different time-order in different frames?Of course I recall, but I haven't had time to research the issue, such as why the frames in the problem are, or might be, spacelike separated. AGFrames have no specific location, they are coordinate systems covering all of spacetime, so it doesn't make sense to say *frames* can be spacelike separated.
On Friday, January 24, 2025 at 2:21:43 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 4:04 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Friday, January 24, 2025 at 10:41:45 AM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 8:53 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 11:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:That's exactly what my diagram shows. Didn't you look at it?
BrentSure, I looked at it but I prefer text, and I forgot you're a deaf mute. And NO, I didn't know that frame transformations can invert time relations. Let's forget it. I forgot you prefer your riddles. Grade C- . AGThe point that the LT can change the order of events with a spacelike separation is one I also talked about many times on the previous thread, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/knVuCxHFAwAJ where I wrote: "Because as you previously agreed, the question of whether the car fits reduces to the question of whether the event A = back of car passes front of garage happens before, after, or simultaneously with the event B = front of car reaches back of garage. Since these events have a spacelike separation in both Brent’s and my numerical examples, in relativity different frames can disagree on their order, that’s the whole reason we say frames disagree on whether the car fits." Likewise in https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/MwKDuJM-AQAJ where I wrote: "Do you understand that when people talk about the relativity of simultaneity in the context of the car/garage problem, they are referring not just to events which are actually simultaneous in some frame, but also the fact that different frames can disagree about the time-ordering of events with a spacelike separation (i.e. neither event is in the past or future light cone of the other event)? The events A and B I was talking about earlier are not simultaneous in either the car frame or the garage frame (at least not with the numerical values for rest lengths and relative velocity given by Brent), but they happen in a different order in the two frames, and the relativity of simultaneity is key to understanding how that's possible, in Newtonian physics where all inertial frames agree about simultaneity there could be no disagreement about the order of any events."Brent has made this point in the past as well, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/WcxkopmjAAAJ where he wrote: "The facts are events in spacetime. There's an event F at which the front of the car is even with the exit of the garage and there's an event R at which the rear of the car is even with the entrance to the garage. If R is before F we say the car fitted in the garage. If R is after F we say the car did not fit. But if F and R are spacelike, then there is no fact of the matter about their time order. The time order will depend on the state of motion."Did you really not remember any of these discussions, or did you just misunderstand the meaning of "invert time relations" to be something different than the idea that two events A and B with a spacelike separation can have a different time-order in different frames?Of course I recall, but I haven't had time to research the issue, such as why the frames in the problem are, or might be, spacelike separated. AGFrames have no specific location, they are coordinate systems covering all of spacetime, so it doesn't make sense to say *frames* can be spacelike separated.Right. I was skeptical about what I wrote, when I wrote it. OTOH, since EVENTS can be spacelike separated, I don't see any such events in this problem. For example, the ends of the car aren't spacelike separated; neither are the ends of the garage. If Brent weren't a failing teacher of SR, he would specify what he means. I am in no mood to guess his meaning. AG
On Friday, January 24, 2025 at 2:21:43 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 4:04 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Friday, January 24, 2025 at 10:41:45 AM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 8:53 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 11:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:That's exactly what my diagram shows. Didn't you look at it?
BrentSure, I looked at it but I prefer text, and I forgot you're a deaf mute. And NO, I didn't know that frame transformations can invert time relations. Let's forget it. I forgot you prefer your riddles. Grade C- . AGThe point that the LT can change the order of events with a spacelike separation is one I also talked about many times on the previous thread, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/knVuCxHFAwAJ where I wrote: "Because as you previously agreed, the question of whether the car fits reduces to the question of whether the event A = back of car passes front of garage happens before, after, or simultaneously with the event B = front of car reaches back of garage. Since these events have a spacelike separation in both Brent’s and my numerical examples, in relativity different frames can disagree on their order, that’s the whole reason we say frames disagree on whether the car fits." Likewise in https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/MwKDuJM-AQAJ where I wrote: "Do you understand that when people talk about the relativity of simultaneity in the context of the car/garage problem, they are referring not just to events which are actually simultaneous in some frame, but also the fact that different frames can disagree about the time-ordering of events with a spacelike separation (i.e. neither event is in the past or future light cone of the other event)? The events A and B I was talking about earlier are not simultaneous in either the car frame or the garage frame (at least not with the numerical values for rest lengths and relative velocity given by Brent), but they happen in a different order in the two frames, and the relativity of simultaneity is key to understanding how that's possible, in Newtonian physics where all inertial frames agree about simultaneity there could be no disagreement about the order of any events."Brent has made this point in the past as well, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/WcxkopmjAAAJ where he wrote: "The facts are events in spacetime. There's an event F at which the front of the car is even with the exit of the garage and there's an event R at which the rear of the car is even with the entrance to the garage. If R is before F we say the car fitted in the garage. If R is after F we say the car did not fit. But if F and R are spacelike, then there is no fact of the matter about their time order. The time order will depend on the state of motion."Did you really not remember any of these discussions, or did you just misunderstand the meaning of "invert time relations" to be something different than the idea that two events A and B with a spacelike separation can have a different time-order in different frames?Of course I recall, but I haven't had time to research the issue, such as why the frames in the problem are, or might be, spacelike separated. AGFrames have no specific location, they are coordinate systems covering all of spacetime, so it doesn't make sense to say *frames* can be spacelike separated.Right. I was skeptical about what I wrote, when I wrote it. OTOH, since EVENTS can be spacelike separated, I don't see any such events in this problem. For example, the ends of the car aren't spacelike separated; neither are the ends of the garage. If Brent weren't a failing teacher of SR, he would specify what he means. I am in no mood to guess his meaning. AG
On Friday, January 24, 2025 at 2:21:43 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:
On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 4:04 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Friday, January 24, 2025 at 10:41:45 AM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:
On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 8:53 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 11:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
That's exactly what my diagram shows. Didn't you look at it?
Brent
Sure, I looked at it but I prefer text, and I forgot you're a deaf mute. And NO, I didn't know that frame transformations can invert time relations. Let's forget it. I forgot you prefer your riddles. Grade C- . AG
The point that the LT can change the order of events with a spacelike separation is one I also talked about many times on the previous thread, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/knVuCxHFAwAJ where I wrote: "Because as you previously agreed, the question of whether the car fits reduces to the question of whether the event A = back of car passes front of garage happens before, after, or simultaneously with the event B = front of car reaches back of garage. Since these events have a spacelike separation in both Brent’s and my numerical examples, in relativity different frames can disagree on their order, that’s the whole reason we say frames disagree on whether the car fits." Likewise in https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/MwKDuJM-AQAJ where I wrote: "Do you understand that when people talk about the relativity of simultaneity in the context of the car/garage problem, they are referring not just to events which are actually simultaneous in some frame, but also the fact that different frames can disagree about the time-ordering of events with a spacelike separation (i.e. neither event is in the past or future light cone of the other event)? The events A and B I was talking about earlier are not simultaneous in either the car frame or the garage frame (at least not with the numerical values for rest lengths and relative velocity given by Brent), but they happen in a different order in the two frames, and the relativity of simultaneity is key to understanding how that's possible, in Newtonian physics where all inertial frames agree about simultaneity there could be no disagreement about the order of any events."
Brent has made this point in the past as well, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/WcxkopmjAAAJ where he wrote: "The facts are events in spacetime. There's an event F at which the front of the car is even with the exit of the garage and there's an event R at which the rear of the car is even with the entrance to the garage. If R is before F we say the car fitted in the garage. If R is after F we say the car did not fit. But if F and R are spacelike, then there is no fact of the matter about their time order. The time order will depend on the state of motion."
Did you really not remember any of these discussions, or did you just misunderstand the meaning of "invert time relations" to be something different than the idea that two events A and B with a spacelike separation can have a different time-order in different frames?
Of course I recall, but I haven't had time to research the issue, such as why the frames in the problem are, or might be, spacelike separated. AG
Frames have no specific location, they are coordinate systems covering all of spacetime, so it doesn't make sense to say *frames* can be spacelike separated.
Right. I was skeptical about what I wrote, when I wrote it. OTOH, since EVENTS can be spacelike separated, I don't see any such events in this problem. For example, the ends of the car aren't spacelike separated; neither are the ends of the garage. If Brent weren't a failing teacher of SR, he would specify what he means. I am in no mood to guess his meaning. AG
It's pairs of points in spacetime, or equivalently pairs of local physical events occuring at each point (like the event of the back of the car passing the entrance of the garage vs. the event of the front of the car reaching the back of the garage), that can be spacelike separated. If you know the distance x and time interval t between the two points/events in the coordinates of any inertial frame, to say they are spacelike separated just means that x > ct (and an equivalent definition is that neither point is in the past or future light cone of the other one). For any two such points/events A and B with a spacelike separation, you can always find some frames where A occurs before B and other frames where B occurs before A, that's something that can be derived from the Lorentz transformation equations.
Jesse
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On 1/24/2025 5:06 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 4:04 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Friday, January 24, 2025 at 10:41:45 AM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:
On Fri, Jan 24, 2025 at 8:53 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 11:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
That's exactly what my diagram shows. Didn't you look at it?
Brent
Sure, I looked at it but I prefer text, and I forgot you're a deaf mute. And NO, I didn't know that frame transformations can invert time relations. Let's forget it. I forgot you prefer your riddles. Grade C- . AG
The point that the LT can change the order of events with a spacelike separation is one I also talked about many times on the previous thread, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/knVuCxHFAwAJ where I wrote: "Because as you previously agreed, the question of whether the car fits reduces to the question of whether the event A = back of car passes front of garage happens before, after, or simultaneously with the event B = front of car reaches back of garage. Since these events have a spacelike separation in both Brent’s and my numerical examples, in relativity different frames can disagree on their order, that’s the whole reason we say frames disagree on whether the car fits." Likewise in https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/MwKDuJM-AQAJ where I wrote: "Do you understand that when people talk about the relativity of simultaneity in the context of the car/garage problem, they are referring not just to events which are actually simultaneous in some frame, but also the fact that different frames can disagree about the time-ordering of events with a spacelike separation (i.e. neither event is in the past or future light cone of the other event)? The events A and B I was talking about earlier are not simultaneous in either the car frame or the garage frame (at least not with the numerical values for rest lengths and relative velocity given by Brent), but they happen in a different order in the two frames, and the relativity of simultaneity is key to understanding how that's possible, in Newtonian physics where all inertial frames agree about simultaneity there could be no disagreement about the order of any events."
Brent has made this point in the past as well, for example at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/WcxkopmjAAAJ where he wrote: "The facts are events in spacetime. There's an event F at which the front of the car is even with the exit of the garage and there's an event R at which the rear of the car is even with the entrance to the garage. If R is before F we say the car fitted in the garage. If R is after F we say the car did not fit. But if F and R are spacelike, then there is no fact of the matter about their time order. The time order will depend on the state of motion."
Did you really not remember any of these discussions, or did you just misunderstand the meaning of "invert time relations" to be something different than the idea that two events A and B with a spacelike separation can have a different time-order in different frames?
Of course I recall, but I haven't had time to research the issue, such as why the frames in the problem are, or might be, spacelike separated. AG
Frames have no specific location, they are coordinate systems covering all of spacetime, so it doesn't make sense to say *frames* can be spacelike separated.
Right. I was skeptical about what I wrote, when I wrote it. OTOH, since EVENTS can be spacelike separated, I don't see any such events in this problem. For example, the ends of the car aren't spacelike separated; neither are the ends of the garage. If Brent weren't a failing teacher of SR, he would specify what he means. I am in no mood to guess his meaning. AG
You mean you just want to keep trolling Jesse.
Brent