On Tuesday, December 17, 2024 at 11:11:11 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Tue, Dec 17, 2024 at 11:34 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Tuesday, December 17, 2024 at 9:05:09 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Tue, Dec 17, 2024 at 10:52 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Tuesday, December 17, 2024 at 6:57:28 PM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:

I 

On Tuesday, December 17, 2024 at 2:33:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:

On 12/17/2024 9:25 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:


Yes, you look at it just in terms of lengths, which is what I did in the 
first pair of diagrams.  But the relativity of simultaneity is another 
way to look at the same problem, which is what I showed in my last posting.


*Another way, but not the only way. AG *


We seem to be on the same page concerning use of length contraction to 
explain the
differing results in the frames under consideration. But I remain unclear 
how the
disagreement of simultaneity can also give the same results. For example, 
suppose
from the pov of the garage frame, the car fits in the garage for sufficient 
v, with room
to spare, but the front and rear end EVENTS do not Lorentz transform into 
simultaneous
events in the car frame. Can't there be other ways for the car to fit, 
using another set 
of events which* are* simultaneous in the car frame? AG 


For any pair of events on the worldlines of the front and back of the car 
which are simultaneous in the car frame, rhe distance between that pair of 
events in the car frame is always 12.

 
OK, AG
 

And for any pair of events on the worldlines of the front and back of the 
*garage* which are simultaneous in the car frame, the distance between that 
pair of events in the car frame is always 6. 


Don't follow. AG


Can you say more about what you don't follow about this comment? Given the 
two garage worldlines, we can find pairs of events along those two 
worldlines that are simultaneous in the car frame, no? (just draw a 
horizontal line in the first of Brent's diagrams, which was drawn from the 
POV of the car frame, and the points where your horizontal line intersects 
the two slanted red garage worldlines will be such a pair) Is that the part 
you don't follow, or do you not follow why the distance between any such 
pair would be 6 in the car frame?
 
Jesse


Truthfully, I don't follow these arguments using worldlines, but what I can 
say is that it's more or less uniformly assumed in the physics community, 
that the problem is solved, whatever the problem is -- and now I'm not 
sure! -- by the claim that simultaneous events in one frame, are not 
simultaneous in the other -- the frames being the car and garage frames. 
Now, in Brent's recent plots, he seems to show, or believe, that when the 
car fits perfectly, from the pov of the garage frame due to contraction of 
the car, that the front and back events ARE simultaneous in the car frame. 
So, if what I've written is correct, why does the consensus opinion 
conclude that the problem's solution depends on something which isn't true; 
namely, an alleged disagreement about simultaneity? AG

Finally, since using length contraction and Brent's initial conditions of 
the lengths of the car and garage as 12' and 10' respectively, is there any 
objection to the conclusion that from the car's frame, it never fits in the 
garage, and if so, is there any paradox implied that the frames disagree on 
whether the car will fit, or not, in the garage? AG

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