On Friday, December 27, 2024 at 6:48:56 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Fri, Dec 27, 2024 at 4:58 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Friday, December 27, 2024 at 9:16:39 AM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Friday, December 27, 2024, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Thursday, December 26, 2024 at 9:39:41 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Thursday, December 26, 2024, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Thursday, December 26, 2024 at 2:56:04 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Thursday, December 26, 2024, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Thursday, December 26, 2024 at 3:26:41 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:

On Thursday, December 26, 2024 at 12:12:43 AM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Wednesday, December 25, 2024, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

       On Wednesday, December 25, 2024 at 5:14:21 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer 
wrote:

On Wednesday, December 25, 2024, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

*Why do refer to transformations that don't preserve time ordering? IIUC, 
such transformations only occur when assuming motion faster than light. *


No, that’s not correct. Motion faster than light would be required if there 
was a claim of causal influence between events with a spacelike separation; 
but there’s no such claim here; in both Brent’s example and mine, if we 
consider the event A of the back of the car passing the front of the garage 
and the event B of the front of the car reaching the back of the garage, 
there is a spacelike separation between those events, and neither event has 
a causal influence on the other.


*I'm asking a general question. Why do you refer to failure of time 
ordering? What was the point you thought you were making? AG*


Because as you previously agreed, the question of whether the car fits 
reduces to the question of whether the event A = back of car passes front 
of garage happens before, after, or simultaneously with the event B = front 
of car reaches back of garage. Since these events have a spacelike 
separation in both Brent’s and my numerical examples, in relativity 
different frames can disagree on their order, that’s the whole reason we 
say frames disagree on whether the car fits.


*As I recall, you were writing about the failure of TIME ordering, and this 
would mean violation of causality, not what we're discussing on this 
thread. AG * 


You either recall incorrectly or misunderstood at the time, but 
disagreement about the time ordering of two events A and B does NOT imply 
any violation of causality; it just implies the spacetime interval between 
A and B is spacelike, but normally this is combined with the assumption 
that there are no causal influences between events with a spacelike 
separation. 

Do you understand what the spacetime interval is? If I gave you the 
difference in time coordinates T = tB - tA for the two events along with 
the difference in position coordinates X = xB - xA, would you know how to 
calculate the spacetime interval and judge whether it is timelike, 
spacelike or lightlike? 

 


*But if so, you're not within the postulates of SR, which is what this 
discussion is about. So what point do you think you're making? AG*

*Re: paradox: Assume there's an observer located in the garage. This 
observer is in the garage frame. This observer sees the car easily fit in 
the garage. Imagine another observer riding in the car. This observer is in 
the car frame and observes being in the garage but never fitting in the 
garage. What are the observations when the two observers pass each other, 
in juxtaposed positions?*


I’ve asked this before, but by “see” do you mean in terms of when the light 
from different events reaches their eyes, or something more abstract like a 
computer animation they create of when events occur in their frame, once 
they have measured the time and position coordinates of all events using 
local readings on rulers and clocks at rest relative to themselves?


*Nothing more abstract. One observer sees the car sticking outside the back 
of garage, the other sees it inside, when both are juxtaposed. *


You didn’t quite answer my question—you are just talking about what they 
see with their eyes, right?


*I used the word "see". Is this not clear enough? AG*

 

Not entirely, since it’s routine in relativity problems to use words 
differently from everyday speech, for example in ordinary speech when you 
talk about “observing” some event we are usually talking about visual 
sight, but in relativity talking about what someone “observes” always 
refers to how things happen in the coordinates of their frame, not to 
visual sight. 

 

If so, there is no disagreement between observers passing through the same 
point in spacetime about whether the car fits in a visual sense.


*Really? So if the garage is 10' long in rest frame, *


Do you mean 10’ in the garage’s rest frame? As I said before, just using 
“rest frame” without specifying a particular object is unclear.


*I appreciate your thoroughness but here I just left out "its", as in "... 
10' long in its rest frame", and I think you should have easily inferred my 
meaning. AG *


Given that you had recently objected to my use of the phrases “car’s rest 
frame” and “garage’s rest frame” and hadn’t acknowledged my response about 
how this is a standard way of speaking in relativity, I didn’t think it was 
safe to assume that. It would help if you would acknowledge when something 
I’ve said has led you to revise a view, even on something minor like 
terminology, otherwise I don’t know when a given point needs to be 
re-litigated. The recent discussion about how we can talk about events that 
are spacelike separated without implying any faster than light causal 
influence is another example; do I need to keep arguing that or does the 
fact that you dropped that discussion mean you concede the point?


Could you please address my comment above so I know if we’re in 
disagreement on these points?


*I don't object to your terminology. As I stated, if I had included "its" 
in my statement, there would have been no ambiguity about terminology. And 
as far as I can recall, I never objected to the use of your quoted 
statements about rest frames. AG* 


You objected multiple times in the last few days to my terminology where 
"car's rest frame" refers to the frame where the car is at rest (i.e. it 
has position coordinates that don't change with time) and the garage is 
moving (so the garage is Lorentz-contracted in the car's rest frame), while 
"garage's rest frame" symmetrically refers to the frame where the garage is 
at rest and the car is moving (so the car is Lorentz-contracted in the 
garage's rest frame). For example in the post at 
https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/XZrHB-IdAwAJ I 
said:

"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.”

And you responded:

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

Then at 
https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/mFVsDGUtAwAJ 
you responded by imagining “the rest frame” referred to some imaginary 
initial conditions that were never part of the problem I described, 
conditions where both the car and garage were at rest relative to each 
other:

“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. When the car is 
moving, we have been calling the other two frames, simply the car frame and 
the garage frame.”

Then at 
https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/1AWAOHA4AwAJ 
you again objected to the standard terminology in which “car’s rest frame” 
just refers to the frame where the car is at rest in the sense of having a 
fixed position coordinate, even if it is moving relative to the garage:

“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”

Then just yesterday at 
https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/vcrAzg4HSSc/m/O12FCXvmAwAJ 
you again objected to this standard terminology:

“What could be the meaning of "rest frame" associated with "garage"? I 
don't have a clue. Shall we consult Webster's Dictionary?”


*I was being sarcastic. Not to be taken at face value. AG *


So it would be helpful to know if you're willing to accept that my use of 
"car's rest frame" and "garage's rest frame" is the standard way of talking 
among physicists, or if you still object. 


*Instead of haggling over this issue, and possibly taking some of my 
comments out of context, we agree that when using the LT from either frame, 
the car or garage length in that frame has not changed from its initial 
condition, 12' or 10', respectively. At that point it was agreed that car 
cannot fit in garage because of length considerations. Consequently, 
following that agreement, I calculated using the LT, that the car fits or 
not -- fits in garage frame, doesn't fit in **car frame -- based solely on 
length considerations. **If the car can't fit from its frame when v = 0, it 
can't fit for any v > 0, since the garage gets even shorter. I think you 
and Brent believe it can't fit in car frame due to disagreement about 
simultaneity, whereas I use length contraction to reach the same 
conclusion. And we agree it can fit from the pov of the garage frame, since 
the car's length contracts. So what are we arguing about is this; does the 
disagreement about fit constitute an objective fact and thus a paradox? AG*

 

 


*What could be the meaning of "rest frame" associated with "garage"? I 
don't have a clue. Shall we consult Webster's Dictionary? As for my 
numerical example, I suggest you do the arithmetic, and if you don't get my 
prediction, I will concede the argument. AG *


*Yeah, use 12' and 10' for the lengths of the car and garage respectively 
when at rest (which means no motion of car). Then using the LT determine 
how fast the car must be moving to contract the car's rest length to 
.000001' from the pov of the garage frame. Then place the car in the center 
of garage, and recognize how easily it fits (by any method of your choice). 
Now, from the pov of the car frame, and the speed of the car previously 
calculated, calculate the contracted length of the garage, and place the 
car at the center of the garage. Does the front of the car extend beyond 
the rear of the garage, whereas previously it did not? No need to worry 
about what "seeing" means in this comparison.*


It’s critical that you specify if by “see” you are talking about what light 
signals are reaching their eyes at that point, or if you are talking about 
the coordinates they assign to front and back of car and garage at 
simultaneous moments in their own frames; the answer will be completely 
different depending on what you mean. If you are just talking about visual 
seeing, I can do that, but just be aware that most of the usual textbook 
equations of relativity including length contraction are *not* intended to 
address visual appearances.

Jesse 


*Let's forget about "seeing" in these scenarios since I agree it 
unnecessarily complicates the analyses. I will go back to your post with my 
question marks and try to resolve as much as possible. However, I don't 
think we can resolve anything in these discussions, for this reasonaaaaa. I 
proposed a scenario where from the garage frame the car fits with ease, 
whereas from the car frame it fails to fit and in fact easily extends 
beyond the rear end of garage. I conjecture that your response will be that 
different frames give different measurements, so there's nothing 
particularly noteworthy about this situation, and it certainly doesn't 
amount to a paradox. This result concerning fitting or not can easily be 
concluded without any arithmetic. Is my conjecture about your response 
correct? AG*


Sure, if we are talking about local measurements in each frame rather than 
visual seeing, I see no paradox in the fact that they disagree on the time 
order of the spacelike separated events A=“back of car passes front of 
garage” and B=“front of car passes back of garage” and therefore disagree 
on fitting.


*In the example I posted, the frames disagree on fitting, and AFAICT 
there's nothing to suggest a disagreement on the time order of events. In 
fact, what you claim doesn't seem physically impossible in either frame. 
Can you show me EXACTLY how you reached this conclusion, without referring 
to one of your other posts? It seems that you pulled that conclusion out of 
the preverbial hat. AG*


You can easily just look at the times of events in either Brent’s numerical 
example or mine to see the two frames disagree on the order of the two 
events I keep bringing up, A=“back of car passes front of garage” and 
B=“front of car reaches back of garage”. In my example, A and B happen 
simultaneously at t = 0 in the garage frame, while in the car frame B 
happens at t’ = -15, which is before the time when A happens in the car 
frame at t’ = 0.

And isn’t it obvious that if some frame says that B happens before A, 
meaning the front of the car reaches the back of the garage before the back 
of the car has yet entered the front of the garage, then that’s equivalent 
to the statement that in that frame the car doesn’t fit, whereas in a frame 
where A happens before B or simultaneously with it, the car does fit in 
that frame?

This is one of the most basic aspects of analyzing the problem that we’ve 
talked about over and over, and you’ve previously agreed to, I don’t 
understand why there’s be any confusion here.


*Your memory is in error. I never agreed to that. *


Yes you did! See our discussion at 
https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/B15IG50SAQAJ 
where I was responding to your previous comment at "I haven't thought about 
ordering", and I said the following:

"You haven't thought about it?? Disagreement about the ordering of these 
two specific events (due to differences in simultaneity) is what Brent and 
I have both been emphasizing as the fundamental resolution of the paradox, 
have you not even understood that this is central to what we are arguing, 
and considered in an open-minded way whether or not it makes sense?


*As I think I posted, I don't understand the argument that disagreement 
about simultaneity resolves the paradox. This is surely the standard 
alleged solution, but using the LT and length contraction, I seem to get a 
paradox if we assume disagreement about fitting is the cause of the 
paradox. You claim time-ordering shows the car can't fit. This is my 
conclusion using length contraction, whiich seems simpler. So, our 
disagreement of the resolution apparently has nothing to do with whether 
the car fits from its frame, since we're in agreement that it does not. AG *

If you don't see why the ordering of these two events is considered 
equivalent to the question of fitting, consider a simpler classical 
scenario where everyone agrees about simultaneity and length. A car is 
passing through a covered bridge, and we are observing it in a side view 
with the car driving from left to right, so the front of the car begins to 
disappear from view under the bridge as soon as it passes the left end of 
the bridge, and begins to re-emerge into view as soon as it passes the 
right end of the bridge. Would you agree in *this* scenario, if the back of 
the car disappears from view on the left end before the front of the car 
emerges into view on the right end, that means for some time the car was 
fully hidden under the covered bridge, meaning it "fit" inside? And would 
you likewise agree that if the front of the car starts to emerge from view 
on the right end before the back of the car has disappeared from view on 
the left end (say it's a very short covered bridge and the car is a stretch 
limo), so there was never a time when the car was fully obscured from view 
by the covered bridge, that means the car did *not* fit inside?"

      Then at 
https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/KmDqElIUAQAJ 
you quoted my statement above "If you don't see why the ordering of these 
two events is considered equivalent to the question of fitting," and you 
responded by saying "It obviously is. Sorry about the confusion. AG"

     In another followup comment at 
https://groups.google.com/g/everything-list/c/gbOE5B-7a6g/m/gi9RERcVAQAJ 
you quoted more of the classical covered bridge scenario I had written, and 
then you replied "I think I agree with your criteria for fit and not fit. 
What bothers me is the disagreement between frames about fitness or not, 
and why the alledged lack of simultaneity resolves the apparent 
contradiction. AG"


*If time ordering establishes the car cannot fit in the garage from car's 
frame, won't the reverse also be true; that the car cannot fit in garage 
from garage frame for the same reason due to symmetric use of the LT, and 
that the frames are equivalent in SR. This why I haven't considered 
disagreement about simultaneity the resolution of the paradox. AG*


*Which frame are you referring to? Presumably the car frame where you claim 
the car cannot fit.*


Read the statement about A and B again, it's an if-then conditional that 
covers any frame. If we're talking about a frame where B happens before A, 
then the car does not fit in that frame; if we're talking about a frame 
where A occurs before B, or simultaneously with it, then the car does fit 
in that frame.
 

* How can it not fit when via contraction the length of the garage can be 
made arbitrarily short with sufficient velocity via the LT? I didn't 
understand Brent's plots or your numerical example well enough to make that 
conclusion. I thought I indicated that with my question marks on your 
analysis. AG*


Yes, the garage can be made arbitrarily short in the car's frame by picking 
a high relative velocity, why do you think this is at odds with the idea 
that the car won't fit? 


*I think that was a typo. Sorry about that! The car couldn't fit initially, 
so it can't fit when the garage is shorten from the pov of car frame. AG *

Obviously if the length of the garage is shorter than the car, the car will 
not fit, exactly as would be true in a classical scenario with a garage 
shorter than a car. And in such a frame, the event B="front of car passes 
back of garage" happens before the event A="back of car passes front of 
garage", just as you'd expect in the classical covered bridge scenario I 
wrote about previously.


*As I commented somewhere here in BLUE, won't the reverse also be true due 
to frame equivalence in SR and permissible symmetric use of LT; namely, 
that from pov of garage frame, the car won't fit due to disagreement about 
simultaneity? AG  *

 

As I’ve said, I think the basic “threat” of this problem is a disagreement 
over local physical facts, so once one understands they don’t disagree on 
any of the readings on specific physical clocks in the vicinity of A and B, 
that initial threat disappears. If your position is that a disagreement 
about fitting / time order of A and B is inherently paradoxical *even if* 
there is no disagreement on local physical facts (including both clock 
readings and visual appearances at any point in spacetime), then I would 
ask you to address the question I asked in this paragraph from a few posts 
back

Why do you see disagreement about whether something "fits" as a fatal flaw, 
but *not* see it as a fatal flaw when we have any other quantity that 
differs between inertial frames, like disagreement about simultaneity in 
relativity, or disagreement about velocity or x-coordinate or distance 
intervals in both relativity and classical mechanics? You have never given 
any explanation of this--it seems likely it's just a matter of appealing to 
your personal intuitions. 


*Not just intuition. In this case I believe there is one objective reality, 
whether the car fits or not.*


That’s just restating your intuition that “fitting” must be part of 
objective reality, it doesn’t answer my question about why you see this 
case as fundamentally different than the other frame-dependent issues I 
mentioned above. Suppose someone says “it’s a fatal flaw in both relativity 
and classical mechanics that two frames can disagree about which of two 
objects has a greater velocity, there can only be one objective reality!” 
Would you agree or disagree?


*In this problem we can assume the garage isn't moving as an objective 
fact,*


Neither classical mechanics nor relativity would agree "the garage isn't 
moving" is an objective fact, if by "objective" you mean something 
different frames can agree on. Are you saying that you think classical 
mechanics is indeed fatally flawed because it makes movement vs. rest 
entirely frame-dependent?


*Well, in this case everyone with common sense knows the garage isn't 
moving, and what we have is relative motion, which allows us to calculate 
AS IF the garage is moving. AG *


 *And the only way to justify this pov is to know the car's history, of 
being accelerated at some point in its past. I can only comment on 
particular situations. AG*

Neither classical mechanics nor relativity would say past accelerations are 
relevant to any frame's definition of who is "moving" and who is "at rest".


*That's one way. There could be others. Best IMO is not to confuse actual 
motion with the situation at hand, namely relative motion. Relative motion 
means that from the pov of any frame, entities in other frames appear to be 
moving. AG *
 

If you disagree, do you have any reasoned argument for this, or is it just 
an intuition that fitting is part of objective reality but velocity is not?


* This is why I modeled the problem as having the observers in each frame 
juxtaposed. In this situation, how can the observers make diametrically 
opposite conclusions about fitting? Consequently, I believe SR is fatally 
flawed. AG*


By juxtaposed do you just mean both observers are at the same point in 
spacetime?

 
*The labels in spacetime depend on the frame of reference since each label 
is arbitrary and frame dependent, so the two observers won't agree on the 
labels, but apparently they can be co-located. AG*
 

But as I pointed out they won’t have a different visual opinion about 
whether the car fits in this case, 


*So, in your opinion, if the car doesn't fit in the car's frame, the 
observer nevertheless in this frame will see that it fits because that's 
what the garage observer sees? AG*


If you're talking about visual seeing, it would depend which point in 
spacetime you are asking about, from some points both ends of the car will 
appear to be inside the garage visually, and from other points at least one 
end will appear outside the garage. But this only depends on which point in 
spacetime you choose, it makes no difference whether an observer passing 
through that point is at rest relative to the garage or at rest relative to 
the car.


*I would put car observer at front of car, and garage observer at end of 
garage. So in case of car fitting, both see the same thing, whereas in car 
not fitting, their observation would be different. In this scenario, we 
might need a second sychronized garage observer at front of garage. In any 
case, let's focus on length contraction. AG *


Jesse

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