On Thursday, December 12, 2024 at 12:16:24 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Thu, Dec 12, 2024 at 5:09 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Thursday, December 12, 2024 at 1:55:07 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:

On Thursday, December 12, 2024 at 1:43:53 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:

Il n'y a pire sourd que celui qui ne veut pas entendre.


You're afraid to answer a simple question. Will you tell the car observer 
that he was suffering an illusion, or what? AG 


The answer is the car will crash into the end wall of the garage because 
the frame of the car supercedes the frame of the garage, similar to why in 
the Twin Paradox the traveling twin ages more slowly than the Earth-bound 
twin due to the asymmetry inherent in its path which is identified by its 
acceleration. AG 


If the car continues to move inertially right up to the front end hitting 
the back wall, then both frames predict the car crashes, the garage frame 
just differs in saying that the back end of the car had already entered the 
garage prior to the crash (so the car briefly 'fit' prior to the crash). 
Earlier weren't you willing to consider the simpler scenario where the 
garage is more like a covered bridge with both ends open, so that inertial 
motion can continue after the front of the car passes the back of the 
bridge/garage?

Jesse


I solved the problem using the insight of what a passenger in the car would 
experience, as well as changing the model so that the front door of garage 
is open, and back door closed. Then, using Brent's parameters, since the 
car's length is greater than the garage's length in the car's frame, the 
car will crash into the back door. I claimed that the car either fits or 
doesn't fit, and Brent firmly rejected that claim. And by fit, I mean the 
car's length equals the garage's length, but this can't happen using 
Brent's parameters because the car is definitely longer in length than the 
garage. So what will the passenger experience? -- definitely. and only, a 
crash at the back door of garage. Could the passenger also experience a 
non-crash at the back door because of what the garage frame implies, that 
the car's length is SMALLER than the garage's length? Definitely not! It 
makes absolutely zero sense that the passenger would physically experience 
a crash and a non-crash at the back door of garage. So what the hell is 
going on? It then occurred to me that this situation is somewhat analogous 
to the Twin Paradox (TP), where the two frames seem identical, yielding an 
age contradiction when the twins meet. But the solution to the TP is the 
recognition that the frames are NOT equivalent due to the accelerations of 
only the traveling twin whose clock can be shown, with SR or GR (although 
they likely give different numerical values), that the traveling twin's 
clock ticks at a SLOWER rate than the clock of the Earth-bound twin, 
accounting for the age difference when they meet. So, how to apply the 
lesson of the TP to the issue at hand? How is the garage frame different 
from the car frame? The answer is ACCELERATION! Specifically, in the 
problem at hand, these frames can only be equivalent if they have 
*equivalent* *histories.* But they don't. To get the car's velocity v = 
.8c, it must be accelerated, but the garage is never physically 
accelerated. So the frames in the problem we've been discussing are not 
equivalent in similar manner as the TP frames are not equivalent. And for 
this reason the implications of the garage frame cannot be put on an equal 
footing with the car's frame, and explains why the passenger just 
experiences a crash at the end door of the garage, but no non-crash (which 
makes no sense anyway, even absent an analysis of frames). AG


 


Le jeu. 12 déc. 2024, 09:35, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> a écrit :

On Thursday, December 12, 2024 at 12:23:54 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:

On Thursday, December 12, 2024 at 12:14:07 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:

On Wednesday, December 11, 2024 at 11:44:13 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:

On 12/11/2024 10:13 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:

 

> The observer in the car's frame denies the cat fits in the garage, 
> whereas the observer in the garage's frame affirms the car fits in the 
> garage. But what does the observer riding in the car observe? TY, AG 

He would obviously be observing the car's frame.  I think you could have 
figured that out yourself. 

Brent


I did, but IIRC, I didn't ask you. AG

 
I was speculating that the observer riding in the car, might be in the best
position to determine the reality of what's happening. AG 


So if the observer in the car reported that the car crashed into the back 
wall,
would you claim he was mistaken, or say had the wrong point of view? AG 

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