Albert Einstein: Relativity
Part I: The Special Theory of Relativity
On the Relativity of the Conception of Distance

 

Let us consider two particular points on the train 1) travelling along the 
embankment with the velocity v, and inquire as to their distance apart. We 
already know that it is necessary to have a body of reference for the 
measurement of a distance, with respect to which body the distance can be 
measured up. It is the simplest plan to use the train itself as reference-body 
(co-ordinate system). An observer in the train measures the interval by marking 
off his measuring-rod in a straight line (e.g. along the floor of the carriage) 
as many times as is necessary to take him from the one marked point to the 
other. Then the number which tells us how often the rod has to be laid down is 
the required distance.

It is a different matter when the distance has to be judged from the railway 
line. Here the following method suggests itself. If we call A1 and B1 the two 
points on the train whose distance apart is required, then both of these points 
are moving with the velocity v along the embankment. In the first place we 
require to determine the points A and B of the embankment which are just being 
passed by the two points A1 and B1 at a particular time t — judged from the 
embankment. These points A and B of the embankment can be determined by 
applying the definition of time given in Section 8. The distance between these 
points A and B is then measured by repeated application of thee measuring-rod 
along the embankment.

A priori it is by no means certain that this last measurement will supply us 
with the same result as the first. Thus the length of the train as measured 
from the embankment may be different from that obtained by measuring in the 
train itself. This circumstance leads us to a second objection which must be 
raised against the apparently obvious consideration of Section 6. Namely, if 
the man in the carriage covers the distance w in a unit of time — measured from 
the train, — then this distance — as measured from the embankment — is not 
necessarily also equal to w. 



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