On Friday, December 20, 2024 at 7:47:47 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Fri, Dec 20, 2024 at 6:53 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

On Friday, December 20, 2024 at 3:03:36 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:

On Fri, Dec 20, 2024 at 6:14 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

Please define what you mean by local events, with some examples. 


I did that in my last two comments on the other thread, the first of which 
you had said you were going to respond to in more detail. In my 
second-to-last post see the two paragraphs beginning with the sentence 'But 
are you asking a different question about what is the motive for demanding 
that any claims about how things work in different frames needs to pass the 
test of giving identical local predictions, in order to qualify as good 
physics?' with the example of the mini bomb and the glass of water, and in 
my last post see the paragraphs beginning with '"The car fits" or "the car 
fits" are not statements about local events, i.e. statements about things 
that happen at a single spacetime point in one of Brent's diagrams'--in 
that comment I then went on to give examples involving endpoints of the car 
and garage crossing paths with clock readings and ruler markings given at 
those specific crossing points in spacetime. Can you re-read those 
carefully, and if you're still unclear ask follow-up questions to either of 
those comments?

Note that in these kinds of problems we idealize things like clocks and 
endpoints of the car as being like point particles that only have a single 
position coordinate at a single time coordinate (likewise the bomb and the 
glass of water), which I assume you won't have a problem with if you are 
willing to similarly idealize the car and garage as 1-dimensional. But if 
you were to treat clocks etc. as having an extension in space that was tiny 
compared to the lengths of the car/garage, and passing by the ends of the 
car garage at a similarly tiny distance, this would differ only negligibly 
from the idealized calculation of treating them as points.

Jesse


I don't have a problem with idealizations and it's clear that we're using 
them in this issue. I didn't want to reply on the other thread in order not 
to mess up your long post which I will eventually respond to. And I realize 
that the simultaneous endpoints of a perfectly fitting car are not local 
events but why does the fact that they're not simultaneous in the car frame 
solve this apparent paradox? And you'll notice the author I quoted doesn't 
state exactly what the paradox is. AG 


What I'm saying is that "solving the paradox" requires understanding that 
despite the disagreement over fit, there is no actual disagreement about 
local events like the ones I mentioned with rulers and clocks at different 
positions. But to understand conceptually how it can be possible that they 
can disagree on fitting but still agree on all details about local events, 
you really need to look at the way the frames have differing definitions of 
simultaneity. As I pointed out on the other thread, if you imagine a 
hypothetical world where there is *no* disagreement over simultaneity but 
each frame still predicts that objects moving in that frame are 
Lorentz-contracted, then two frames that make different claims about 
whether the car fit would automatically *also* be disagreeing over clock 
readings at some local events.

As for the other author you quoted, that person is dealing with a different 
version of the car/garage paradox where the car is supposed to 
instantaneously accelerate to come to rest relative to the garage when the 
front end reaches the back of the garage, and they're saying that this 
would lead to different physical scenarios depending on whether all points 
in the car accelerate simultaneously in the car frame, or if they 
accelerate simultaneously in the garage frame. In the first scenario the 
back end of the car will come to rest relative to the garage when it's 
outside the garage (so the car never fit in either frame) and in the second 
scenario the back end of the car will come to rest when it's inside the 
garage (so the car did fit in both frames). This wouldn't be a mere 
difference between frames as in Brent's scenario where there's no 
acceleration, these would be two physically different options for how to 
accelerate the car.


There's nothing in that scenario which models it as accelerating (actually 
decelerating) to get a perfect fit. In fact, the author states that the car 
fits in the garage from the garage frame, but not in the garage in the car 
frame. He then states that simultaneity fails in car frame and this is the 
alleged solution. At least he seems to agree with my concept of what 
constitutes a paradox. AG


Jesse

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