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>I believe you are "misunderstanding" me. It is possible to under-
Den 25.04.2025 00:13, skrev gharnagel:>>
On Thu, 24 Apr 2025 8:21:30 +0000, Paul.B.Andersen wrote:>>
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In physics "time" is a well defined, measurable entity.
>
https://paulba.no/pdf/Clock_rate.pdf
Just because we can measure it doesn't mean we understand it.
You can't 'understand' why Nature works as she does.
A theory of physics is a mathematical model of an aspect of Nature.
It doesn't 'explain' anything.
The only test of a mathematical consistent theory is if it canOf course, but that one wrong prediction must be a GOOD prediction,
correctly predict what will be measured in experiments.
It takes but one wrong prediction to falsify a theory.
Again, you misunderstand me. You are preaching to the choir.And when we measure it, and different observers disagree with>
our measurement, and relativity "explains" the disagreement,
might not really bring us closer to understanding it.
Relativity (SR/GR) does obviously not "explain" anything.
But SR/GR will correctly predict what the different observers
will measure in experiments.
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If you think it is self-contradictory that different observers
have different measurements of the observed object's properties,
consider this:
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The observer's state of motion can not affect the observed object.
But the observer's state of motion can affect the observer's
measurements of the observed object's properties.
No, it's not (but I disagree with it)I attended a lecture many years ago where it was explained that>
each of the four dimensions were really identical and we were
always moving at the speed of light - along one of them. That
one was our time dimension. That seemed to be very satisfying
at the time. This would mean that there is a basic symmetry
between time and space.
This is nonsense.
Let "the moving object" be a clock.Not on a Minkowski diagram. And your equations for four-velocity
The metric in flat spacetime can be written:
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dτ² = dt² - (dx² + dy² + dz²)/c² (1)
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where τ is what the clock shows, c is the speed of light
and t,x,y,z are the coordinates of an inertial frame of reference.
>
from (1) we have:
(dτ/dt)² = (1 - ((dx/dt)²+(dy/dt)²+(dz/dt)²)/c²) = (1−v²/c²) (2)
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where v = √((dx/dt)²+(dy/dt)²+(dz/dt)²) is the magnitude of
the moving object's velocity.
>
from (2) we have:
dt/dτ = 1/√(1 − v²/c²) = γ
>
Let the velocity of the clock be:
v₁ = dx/dt component along x-axis
v₂ = dy/dt component along y-axis
v₃ = dz/dt component along z-axis
>
The components of the four-velocity will be:
U₀ = dt/dτ = γ component along the time axis
U₁ = dx/dτ = (dx/dt)⋅(dt/dτ) = γ⋅v₁ component along the x-axis
U₂ = dy/dτ = (dy/dt)⋅(dt/dτ) = γ⋅v₂ component along the y-axis
U₃ = dx/dτ = (dz/dt)⋅(dt/dτ) = γ⋅v₃ component along the z-axis
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If v = 0, the object is stationary and γ = 1.
U₀ = 1, U₁ = 0, U₂ = 0, U₃ = 0
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So the "rate of the clock along the time axis" is 1.
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That does _not_ mean that the clock is moving at the speed
of light along the time axis (what a weird idea ).
>
It simply means that the clock is ticking at its normal
rate, one time unit per time unit.
>
The four "dimensions" are _not_ identical, the temporal "dimension"
is fundamentally different from the spatial "dimensions".
It can be shown that the magnitude of th four-velocity is invariant:Yes, and to the stationary observer, the speed of the clock along U₀
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U[²] = - U₀² + U₁² + U₂² + U₃² = -1
Another is that mass-energy can be localized in space but not in time,More recently, some cracks in that view have appeared due to
quantum mechanics. Vaccaro has published a couple of papers
about "Quantum asymmetry between time and space," (2016)
arXiv:1502.04012.
>
One idea is that time reversal would be a tough problem for
causality.
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