Sujet : Re: Muon paradox
De : clzb93ynxj (at) *nospam* att.net (LaurenceClarkCrossen)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativityDate : 02. Apr 2025, 22:33:25
Autres entêtes
Organisation : novaBBS
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On Wed, 2 Apr 2025 19:32:00 +0000, Aether Regained wrote:
Paul.B.Andersen:
Den 01.04.2025 21:06, skrev LaurenceClarkCrossen:
It's easy to understand that the lifetime of the muons is longer and
that time dilation is an illogical fiction divorced from physics.
>
The measured mean lifetime of a stationary muon is 2.2 μs
The measured mean lifetime of a muon moving at 0.999668⋅c is 85.36 μs.
>
These are measured facts!
>
You claim this is easy to understand without using SR,
so please explain why muons live longer when they are moving.
>
>
SR is obfuscation piled upon obfuscation. It doesn't help in
understanding anything.
>
Instead, I'll offer an analogy that illustrates what a real explanation
would be like.
>
Consider a heat shield that any spacecraft that has to renter the
atmosphere needs. If such a heat shield, while testing in a lab, is
heated to the operational temperature, say 1000 degC, and the time taken
to return to room temperature is measured as t_cooldown_lab. Now the
same heat shield when in operation, that is during reentry, as it is
hurtling through the atmosphere, takes far longer to cool down. Of
course, this is because its high speed travel through the atmosphere
heats it up.
>
Now, let us use Feynman's hunch that a muon is simply an excited
electron, an electron vibrating like a bell if you will, or simply a
"hot" electron. A muon/hot-electron at rest will cool down fast, but the
same hot-electron when hurtling through the aether will remain in its
excited state for longer. In light of the analogy to the heat shield,
there is nothing surprising about this. Just as it is absurd to say that
time dilates when the heat shield is in motion, causing it to stay
heated for longer, it is similarly absurd to say that time dilates when
a hot-electron is in motion!
There necessarily exists a better explanation for the muon's survival
than the ad hoc concept of time dilation.
You are right that SR is obfuscation as Heaviside said: "Years later,
after Einstein had published his relativity papers, Heaviside commented,
"I don't find Einstein's Relativity agrees with me. It is the most
unnatural and difficult to understand way of representing facts that
could be thought of. . . . And I really think that Einstein is a
practical joker, pulling the legs of his enthusiastic followers, more
Einsteinisch than he."" - "albert in relativityland"