On Monday, December 23, 2024 at 10:04:41 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Mon, Dec 23, 2024 at 11:47 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Monday, December 23, 2024 at 9:06:31 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Mon, Dec 23, 2024 at 8:55 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Monday, December 23, 2024 at 4:09:38 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Mon, Dec 23, 2024 at 4:10 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Sunday, December 22, 2024 at 10:05:54 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

BTW, since you seem to be interested in a scenario where the car and garage 
are exactly matched in length in the garage frame, something which isn't 
true in Brent's scenario, here's a different scenario you could look at, 
where I'm again using units where c=1, let's say nanoseconds for time and 
light-nanoseconds (i.e. distance light travels in one nanosecond) for 
distance.

--Car's rest length is 25, garage's rest length is 20, car and garage have 
a relative velocity of 0.6c, so gamma factor is 1/sqrt(1 - 0.6^2) = 1.25


*OK. *
 

--In garage rest frame, garage has length 20 and car has length 25/1.25 = 
20. In the car rest frame, the garage has length 20/1.25 = 16 and the car 
has length 25.


*OK, assuming car is moving, but I wouldn't call that "in the car rest 
frame" since you have garage length as contracted. AG *

 
BTW I forgot to reply to this line since it was an overall "OK", but just 
wanted to note that this is the standard meaning of "[object's] rest frame" 
in physics--it refers to the inertial coordinate system where the object, 
in this case the car, has position coordinates that don't change with 
coordinate time, so the car is said to be "at rest" in this coordinate 
system. It is the garage, not the car, that is moving in the car's rest 
frame, since the garage's coordinate position does change with time in this 
frame--this relative perspective on who is "moving" and who is "at rest" is 
just as true in classical mechanics as in special relativity (though of 
course there is no length contraction accompanying motion in classical 
mechanics), see the discussion of Galilean relativity at 
https://www.physicspace.com.ng/2018/09/galilean-relativity-2.html with 
Galileo's own discussion of an observer below decks of a windowless ship 
who has no way of knowing if the ship is at moving smoothly over the water 
or at rest relative to it. If you don't understand this sort of basic 
observation about classical mechanics in an inertial coordinate system 
(along with other basic observations like the classical relation between 
'length' and coordinates of endpoints of an object, or classical relation 
between 'velocity' and the way position coordinates of an object change 
with coordinate time), that's something you really need to bone up on a 
little before tackling relativity.

Jesse


IMO, the rest frame is defined as the initial conditions in this problem 
when the car isn't moving, and is longer than the garage.


This isn't really a matter of opinion, just standard terminology; in 
physics books (in classical mechanics as well as relativity) you will only 
ever see "rest frame" defined relative to specific objects, and you will 
never see any reference to "the" rest frame without it being defined 
relative to such an object, nor is the phrase "isn't moving" understood as 
meaningful unless you add something like "isn't moving relative to [some 
other frame or object]". Please don't make up your own terminology, 


*I'm definitely NOT doing that. Rather, that's how the frame names have 
been used throughout this discussion by members of this MB. AG*


I doubt you are remembering that correctly, especially if you are referring 
to either Brent or myself who have been most active in talking about the 
details of specific numerical examples. You can go back through the threads 
at https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list , just looking at Brent's 
first few posts on this thread, he seems to consistently talk about what's 
happening in "the car's reference frame" or "the garage's reference frame", 
no comments about "the rest frame" or saying anything "isn't moving" except 
in relation to another object, and I'm sure I wouldn't have done that 
either. 


*That's what I've been saying. No one uses "rest frame" when describing the 
results in either frame when the car is moving. You introduced that 
terminology recently, claiming it is standard. AG*
 

But you are free to re-read the thread and see if you can find any 
counter-example to prove me wrong.

Jesse

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