Considering the distant galaxies, they're receding at near light speed. So according to SR, their clocks should be ticking at a much slower rates than, say, a local clock in our galaxy. OTOH, there's a physical clock for the entire universe; namely, the temperature of the CMBR. If we tell time by this clock, all clock readings of all galaxies are identical. So which is it? Are clocks in distant galaxies running slower than a local clock in our galaxy, or are both clocks running at the same rate? TIA, AG
Considering the distant galaxies, they're receding at near light speed. So according to SR, their clocks should be ticking at a much slower rates than, say, a local clock in our galaxy. OTOH, there's a physical clock for the entire universe; namely, the temperature of the CMBR. If we tell time by this clock, all clock readings of all galaxies are identical. So which is it? Are clocks in distant galaxies running slower than a local clock in our galaxy, or are both clocks running at the same rate? TIA, AG
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The idea that some clocks run slower than others is a confusion. Talk of clocks in general relativity always refers to ideal clocks that, by definition, run at identical rates when compared at the same place. "Running slow" really refers to taking a shorter path (less elapsed proper time) thru spacetime, as reflected in the metric. As AG noted the "running slow" relation is symmetric; so it can't be invariant.
Using the CMB is an operational way to define a global time. It is the same as co-moving coordinates in which matter is, on average, stationary. But it is a good/useful coordinate system because it makes the representation of an FLRW model simple. There's an implicit assumption that the universe is homogenous and isotropic, which implies that it satisfies an FLRW model. With that assumption a measurement of curvature locally can be extended to infer the whole spacetime. Space can be flat while spacetime is curved, so as to be open or closed.
Brent
On 1/29/2020 12:57 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
Considering the distant galaxies, they're receding at near light speed. So according to SR, their clocks should be ticking at a much slower rates than, say, a local clock in our galaxy. OTOH, there's a physical clock for the entire universe; namely, the temperature of the CMBR. If we tell time by this clock, all clock readings of all galaxies are identical. So which is it? Are clocks in distant galaxies running slower than a local clock in our galaxy, or are both clocks running at the same rate? TIA, AG--
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On Wednesday, January 29, 2020 at 12:18:40 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:The idea that some clocks run slower than others is a confusion. Talk of clocks in general relativity always refers to ideal clocks that, by definition, run at identical rates when compared at the same place. "Running slow" really refers to taking a shorter path (less elapsed proper time) thru spacetime, as reflected in the metric. As AG noted the "running slow" relation is symmetric; so it can't be invariant.
Using the CMB is an operational way to define a global time. It is the same as co-moving coordinates in which matter is, on average, stationary. But it is a good/useful coordinate system because it makes the representation of an FLRW model simple. There's an implicit assumption that the universe is homogenous and isotropic, which implies that it satisfies an FLRW model. With that assumption a measurement of curvature locally can be extended to infer the whole spacetime. Space can be flat while spacetime is curved, so as to be open or closed.
Brent
Can you answer the question? If we have two clocks at the distant galaxy; some observer's clock which is running slower compared to a local clock in this galaxy, and the CMBR clocks at every location in the universe which are synchronized, what is the status of time dilation? Do it exist or not? TIA, AG
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On 1/29/2020 12:57 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
Considering the distant galaxies, they're receding at near light speed. So according to SR, their clocks should be ticking at a much slower rates than, say, a local clock in our galaxy. OTOH, there's a physical clock for the entire universe; namely, the temperature of the CMBR. If we tell time by this clock, all clock readings of all galaxies are identical. So which is it? Are clocks in distant galaxies running slower than a local clock in our galaxy, or are both clocks running at the same rate? TIA, AG--
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> If we have two clocks at the distant galaxy; some observer's clock which is running slower compared to a local clock in this galaxy, and the CMBR clocks at every location in the universe which are synchronized, what is the status of time dilation? Do it exist or not?
On Wed, Jan 29, 2020 at 10:21 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> If we have two clocks at the distant galaxy; some observer's clock which is running slower compared to a local clock in this galaxy, and the CMBR clocks at every location in the universe which are synchronized, what is the status of time dilation? Do it exist or not?It does. Regardless of what the measured temperature of the CMBR is if you're moving relative to your twin brother then you will observe that his local clock is running slower than your local clock and he will observe that your local clock is running slower than his local clock. And it's not just clocks that are affected, minds are too. You will see that it takes your brother longer to solve a long division problem than it takes you and he will observe that it takes you longer to solve it than it takes him. And none of this has anything to do with the temperature of the CMBR, the only important thing that affects local clocks is the relative motion between you and your twin brother.
The reason this is odd but not a paradox is because of the relativity of simultaneity which Dr. Don Lincoln made clear in the 3 videos I recommended yesterday which you obviously didn't watch. If you're still interested Wikipedia has a rather good article on the subject:And I'll recommend yet another video although I doubt your attention span is long enough to watch all of it, it is after all nearly 4 minutes long:
Considering the distant galaxies, they're receding at near light speed. So according to SR, their clocks should be ticking at a much slower rates than, say, a local clock in our galaxy. OTOH, there's a physical clock for the entire universe; namely, the temperature of the CMBR. If we tell time by this clock, all clock readings of all galaxies are identical. So which is it? Are clocks in distant galaxies running slower than a local clock in our galaxy, or are both clocks running at the same rate? TIA, AG
On Wednesday, January 29, 2020 at 2:57:25 AM UTC-6, Alan Grayson wrote:Considering the distant galaxies, they're receding at near light speed. So according to SR, their clocks should be ticking at a much slower rates than, say, a local clock in our galaxy. OTOH, there's a physical clock for the entire universe; namely, the temperature of the CMBR. If we tell time by this clock, all clock readings of all galaxies are identical. So which is it? Are clocks in distant galaxies running slower than a local clock in our galaxy, or are both clocks running at the same rate? TIA, AGThe physics with distant galaxies is general relativistic, not special relativity.
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 10:16:48 AM UTC-7, Lawrence Crowell wrote:On Wednesday, January 29, 2020 at 2:57:25 AM UTC-6, Alan Grayson wrote:Considering the distant galaxies, they're receding at near light speed. So according to SR, their clocks should be ticking at a much slower rates than, say, a local clock in our galaxy. OTOH, there's a physical clock for the entire universe; namely, the temperature of the CMBR. If we tell time by this clock, all clock readings of all galaxies are identical. So which is it? Are clocks in distant galaxies running slower than a local clock in our galaxy, or are both clocks running at the same rate? TIA, AGThe physics with distant galaxies is general relativistic, not special relativity.I know. Now, if you can, please answer my question. AG
But this is probably wrong since CMBR as viewed from the far galaxy is from a much earlier epoch, so the reading cannot be identical. Do you agree? AG
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That's not it. I think the two observers, one in a galaxy far removed and one here, would read the same CMBR "time", regardless of the distant galaxy's speed of recession. But relativity says otherwise. This is what puzzles me. AG
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 5:09:56 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 12:45 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
That's not it. I think the two observers, one in a galaxy far removed and one here, would read the same CMBR "time", regardless of the distant galaxy's speed of recession. But relativity says otherwise. This is what puzzles me. AG
Ask yourself when do they read the same time.
Brent
I don't know if this helps. Since the temperature of the CMBR is the same everywhere, at any time t,
we can in principle determine if the two measurements are simultaneous or not. AG
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On 1/30/2020 5:37 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 6:29:18 PM UTC-7, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 5:09:56 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 12:45 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
That's not it. I think the two observers, one in a galaxy far removed and one here, would read the same CMBR "time", regardless of the distant galaxy's speed of recession. But relativity says otherwise. This is what puzzles me. AG
Ask yourself when do they read the same time.
Brent
I don't know if this helps. Since the temperature of the CMBR is the same everywhere, at any time t, we can in principle determine if the two measurements are simultaneous or not. AG
But regardless of simultaneity or not, there's no dilation of this clock! (And AE doesn't say what a clock is.) What the hell is going on? AG
The clocks used in relativity examples are the whatever the most perfect and stable clock in existence are (in this case cesium atom clocks). They always measure proper time thru spacetime. The only reason that when compared they seem to register different durations is because they traveled different paths thru spacetime and these paths had different proper length. "Time dilation" is not some function of the clock...it's a function of the path the clock is measuring. Remember my odometer analogy?
Brent
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On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 10:37:13 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 5:37 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 6:29:18 PM UTC-7, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 5:09:56 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 12:45 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
That's not it. I think the two observers, one in a galaxy far removed and one here, would read the same CMBR "time", regardless of the distant galaxy's speed of recession. But relativity says otherwise. This is what puzzles me. AG
Ask yourself when do they read the same time.
Brent
I don't know if this helps. Since the temperature of the CMBR is the same everywhere, at any time t, we can in principle determine if the two measurements are simultaneous or not. AG
But regardless of simultaneity or not, there's no dilation of this clock! (And AE doesn't say what a clock is.) What the hell is going on? AG
The clocks used in relativity examples are the whatever the most perfect and stable clock in existence are (in this case cesium atom clocks). They always measure proper time thru spacetime. The only reason that when compared they seem to register different durations is because they traveled different paths thru spacetime and these paths had different proper length. "Time dilation" is not some function of the clock...it's a function of the path the clock is measuring. Remember my odometer analogy?
BrentGiven that the temperature of the CMBR is the same for every location in space-time, it follows that time dilation is not a property of THIS clock. For this clock, which is NOT moving through space-time, paths through space-time are irrelevant. AG
> The time dilation associated with red shift of radiation is uniform out to a certain distance of around 46 billion light years. It is fairly uniform to within 10^{-5} in isotropy.
LC
This simultaneity is the Hubble frame.LC
> Why difficult? I'm just pointing out an inconvenient fact; namely, if you use the CMBR as a clock (inconvenient to be sure since the temperature decline of the CMBR is exceedingly slow), simultaneity for all observers in all galaxies exists to one part in 100,000. What are the implications? AG
I'll view your articleS if they give a clear explanation of the breakdown in simultaneity, when each observer sees the (other) traveling clock having a different "now". AG
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 10:37:13 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 5:37 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 6:29:18 PM UTC-7, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 5:09:56 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 12:45 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
That's not it. I think the two observers, one in a galaxy far removed and one here, would read the same CMBR "time", regardless of the distant galaxy's speed of recession. But relativity says otherwise. This is what puzzles me. AG
Ask yourself when do they read the same time.
Brent
I don't know if this helps. Since the temperature of the CMBR is the same everywhere, at any time t, we can in principle determine if the two measurements are simultaneous or not. AG
But regardless of simultaneity or not, there's no dilation of this clock! (And AE doesn't say what a clock is.) What the hell is going on? AG
The clocks used in relativity examples are the whatever the most perfect and stable clock in existence are (in this case cesium atom clocks). They always measure proper time thru spacetime. The only reason that when compared they seem to register different durations is because they traveled different paths thru spacetime and these paths had different proper length. "Time dilation" is not some function of the clock...it's a function of the path the clock is measuring. Remember my odometer analogy?
Brent
Given that the temperature of the CMBR is the same for every location in space-time, it follows that time dilation is not a property of THIS clock.
For this clock, which is NOT moving through space-time, paths through space-time are irrelevant. AG
On 1/31/2020 12:04 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 10:37:13 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 5:37 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 6:29:18 PM UTC-7, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 5:09:56 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 12:45 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
That's not it. I think the two observers, one in a galaxy far removed and one here, would read the same CMBR "time", regardless of the distant galaxy's speed of recession. But relativity says otherwise. This is what puzzles me. AG
Ask yourself when do they read the same time.
Brent
I don't know if this helps. Since the temperature of the CMBR is the same everywhere, at any time t, we can in principle determine if the two measurements are simultaneous or not. AG
But regardless of simultaneity or not, there's no dilation of this clock! (And AE doesn't say what a clock is.) What the hell is going on? AG
The clocks used in relativity examples are the whatever the most perfect and stable clock in existence are (in this case cesium atom clocks). They always measure proper time thru spacetime. The only reason that when compared they seem to register different durations is because they traveled different paths thru spacetime and these paths had different proper length. "Time dilation" is not some function of the clock...it's a function of the path the clock is measuring. Remember my odometer analogy?
Brent
Given that the temperature of the CMBR is the same for every location in space-time, it follows that time dilation is not a property of THIS clock.
Time dilation is a property of one clock (or one path) relative to another. It's called relatvity theory of a reason.
Clocks that aren't moving thru spacetime are stopped. You're thinking of clocks that aren't moving thru space.For this clock, which is NOT moving through space-time, paths through space-time are irrelevant. AG
Brent
Brent
> My point is that the CMB "clock" exists everywhere, and that it has no relative motion wrt anything, so how can time dilation be applied to it? AG
>But what if the CMB is the local clock?
> How could it manifest time dilation, compared to a clock in some moving frame, if its "clock" reading doesn't change? AG
What the doppler effect gives is NOT what the train engineer measures or hears, which doesn't change while he moves with constant velocity, but what an observer external to the train measures, which depends on whether the train is coming toward him or receding. Motion in space-time gives the actual total elapsed time of, say, the traveling twin, at any point along his path, namely, the proper time. AG
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 10:37:13 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 5:37 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 6:29:18 PM UTC-7, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 5:09:56 PM UTC-7, Brent wrote:
On 1/30/2020 12:45 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
That's not it. I think the two observers, one in a galaxy far removed and one here, would read the same CMBR "time", regardless of the distant galaxy's speed of recession. But relativity says otherwise. This is what puzzles me. AG
Ask yourself when do they read the same time.
Brent
I don't know if this helps. Since the temperature of the CMBR is the same everywhere, at any time t, we can in principle determine if the two measurements are simultaneous or not. AG
But regardless of simultaneity or not, there's no dilation of this clock! (And AE doesn't say what a clock is.) What the hell is going on? AG
The clocks used in relativity examples are the whatever the most perfect and stable clock in existence are (in this case cesium atom clocks). They always measure proper time thru spacetime. The only reason that when compared they seem to register different durations is because they traveled different paths thru spacetime and these paths had different proper length. "Time dilation" is not some function of the clock...it's a function of the path the clock is measuring. Remember my odometer analogy?
BrentGiven that the temperature of the CMBR is the same for every location in space-time


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