2

I try to understand Einstein's Relativity: The Special and the General Theory, chapter IX., "The Relativity of Simultaneity". Here's an online version: http://www.bartleby.com/173/9.html.

             |----M'----v->
####-----A--------M--------B-----####

Einstein considers two lightning strokes happening at two points A and B along a railway embankment. At this moment, two observers M and M' meet each other at the mid-point between A and B. M resides on the embankment, M' is riding on the train moving with velocity v towards B.

Then, paragraph 3 reads:

"... he [the observer at M'] is hastening towards the beam of light coming from B, whilst he is riding on ahead of the beam of light coming from A. Hence the observer will see the beam of light emitted from B earlier than he will see that emitted from A. Observers who take the railway train as their reference-body must therefore come to the conclusion that the lightning flash B took place earlier than the lightning flash A."

As far as I understood SR until now, this is actually the non-relativistic point of view. Bearing relativity in mind, the moving observer M' should experience both light beams from A and from B approaching with light speed as well, the beam from B being blue-shifted and the one from A red-shifted. In respect to M' they have different energies, but they should arrive at the same time.

The longer I think about it, the more I doubt whether Einstein found a very fortunate thought experiment here. What do you think about it, could that be true?

  • Both beams arrive with the same speed $c$. However, through the movement of M' towards B the distance between him and B is shortened, while the distance to A is lengthend. If you know how to draw Minkowski-diagrams, try to do it, this is imo the easiest way to visualize SR problems. – Clever Jan 12 '15 at 18:58
  • @Clever - This is either incorrect or unclear, since in the rest frame of M', the distance between himself and both flashes is the same, they just happened at different times (whereas in the rest frame of M, both flashes happened at the same time, and M' was at the midpoint of the line segment between them when they happened). – Hypnosifl Jan 12 '15 at 19:20
  • @Hypnosifl - Of course you're right. I only considered one frame. It does not alter the fact, that the Minkowski-diagrams visualize it perfectly (either the different distances or the different times). – Clever Jan 12 '15 at 20:31
  • @Clever - In a Minkowski diagram a light beam is a 45° diagonal line. The beams A-M and B-M build a circumflex. The Lorentz transformation of a 45° line is a 45° line. So the Lorentz transformation of the circumflex is a circumflex. Isn't it? – bertramscharpf Jan 13 '15 at 18:09

2 Answers2

2

This thought experiment is not only fortunately chosen, but crucial to understanding the implications of relativity on simultaneity. It is not described in terms of the non-relativistic view.

Observer M' observes the following: 1) The speed of light is c, independent of direction (hence he is viewing the world relativistically). 2) The lightning strikes leave marks on his train that are equidistant from him, so he knows that A and B occurred equally far away from him. 3) Light from B reaches him before light from A. From these three observations he concludes (correctly for someone in his reference frame) that B happened before A.

Meanwhile, by similar reasoning, Observer M concludes (correctly for someone standing on the embankment) that A and B happened at the same time.

Since the observers draw different conclusions about whether A and B occurred simultaneously, the implication is that simultaneity is relative, i.e. dependent on your frame of reference.

pwf
  • 2,969
  • Your 3) is exactly what does not make sense in the original question. – Tuntable Aug 19 '19 at 05:02
  • @Tuntable - Why do you think it doesn't make sense? Einstein's description of the problem in the link specifically says that the observer M' "will see the beam of light emitted from B earlier than he will see that emitted from A", and that's what 3) above is saying. – Hypnosifl Aug 19 '19 at 21:17
  • Yes, but why would M' see the beam earlier. Einstein says it, but does not explain it, and I suspect it is a fudge. – Tuntable Aug 20 '19 at 07:27
  • @Tuntable - M' sees the beam earlier because the flashes happen at different times in his frame. If two stars go nova and both are 100 light years away from us, but one nova happened in 1900 in our frame and the other happened in 1905, we would see the light at different times, we'd see the first in 2000 and the second in 2005. – Hypnosifl Aug 20 '19 at 21:32
  • You are being circular. The flashes happened at different times in M' s frame because he saw B before A. He saw B before A because the flashes occurred at different times. – Tuntable Aug 21 '19 at 10:54
  • @Tuntable - I'm not saying "he saw B before A because the flashes occurred at different times", I'm just explaining that there's no inconsistency between the idea that both light rays travel at the same speed in his frame, they happened an equal distance from him, yet he sees the light from each one at different times. I thought you might have been arguing for some kind of inconsistency between M' seeing the light from each flash at different times and the idea of light traveling at the same speed in all frames. – Hypnosifl Aug 21 '19 at 12:59
  • (cont.) The deduction that B happens before A in the M' frame is based on this being the only way to assign time-coordinates that's consistent with some assumptions: (1) local events can be predicted in any frame, and all frames will agree in their predictions, (2) Frame M predicts the light rays cross the path of M' at different times, (3) Both rays must travel at the same speed in the M' rest frame, and both flashes happened at equal distances from M' in his rest frame. Do you disagree 1-3 are assumptions in relativity/this problem, or do you think there is some other way to satisfy them? – Hypnosifl Aug 21 '19 at 13:30
  • @Tuntable It's not a fudge, but it is subtle. One of the underlying assumptions is that the physics has to be the same if viewed from any reference frame. Imagine observer M watching what happens to M'. M sees light from B reaching M' first, because M' is moving towards B and away from A. Imagine at that instant, M peeks at M' 's wristwatch (say, with a fast camera located on the tracks right next to the point where M' encounters light from B). It happens to say, 9:00:00 exactly. M keeps observing and when light from A reaches M', M takes another peek at M' 's watch. M' 's watch ... – pwf Aug 22 '19 at 18:16
  • ... must show a later time, say 1 microsecond past 9:00:00. (It may show a different time delay than M's watch, but it must show a delay.) That means if M' is watching her own watch, she will see the light from B at 9:00:00 exactly and the light from A at 9:00:00 + 1 microsecond. In other words, light from B reaches M' before light from A in M's frame, so light from B must reach M' before light from A in M' 's frame also to keep the physics the same in both frames. – pwf Aug 22 '19 at 18:23
  • @Hypnosifl One observer T. Two flashes at points A and B equidistant from T. And yet T sees B before A because there happens to be another observer in some different frame. Yes, I would call that very inconsistent. – Tuntable Aug 23 '19 at 01:35
  • @pwf If M' on the train had mirrors, and M on the station observed the flashes in the mirror, then yes, they would (probably?) appear to M as not simultaneous. But the whole point was that the was not inconsistent with them being simultaneous to M. And Einstein did not mention any mirrors. – Tuntable Aug 23 '19 at 01:37
  • @Tuntable - "And yet T sees B before A because there happens to be another observer in some different frame" No, not "because" there is an observer in another frame, just because the flashes were specified as simultaneous in a frame where T is moving (a 'frame' is just a coordinate system, you can specify the x,y,z,t coordinates of some event in a given frame regardless of whether there happen to be any observers at rest in that frame). – Hypnosifl Aug 23 '19 at 03:45
  • (cont.) As an analogy, think of a purely spatial problem where I have a cartesian coordinate system I am using to assign x,y,z coordinates to points on the landscape, and we specify that two trees have identical x-coordinates in a Cartesian coordinate system whose x-axis is at an angle relative to mine. Isn't this sufficient to conclude the two trees will have different x-coordinates in my own spatial coordinate system? Is that an inconsistency in Cartesian geometry? – Hypnosifl Aug 23 '19 at 03:52
  • @pwf I'm a bit confused by 2). The original article does not mention lightning leaving marks so I'd say it's just two lightnings. I think that's why 2) actually does not hold, because for the person INSIDE of the train, the travelling distance of the two lightnings are not equal. This really confuses me. My question: https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/751673/confused-by-einsteins-train-lightning-thought-experiment – Nicholas Humphrey Feb 24 '23 at 14:08
2

"As far as I understood SR until now, this is actually the non-relativistic point of view. Bearing relativity in mind, the moving observer M' should experience both light beams from A and from B approaching with light speed as well, the beam from B being blue-shifted and the one from A red-shifted. In respect to M' they have different energies, but they should arrive at the same time."

In the paragraph you quote, he is analyzing things from the point of view of the rest frame of observer M, in which the flashes were simultaneous (this is just a physical assumption about the scenario being considered, of course you could also imagine a different physical scenario in which two flashes happened that weren't simultaneous from the perspective of an observer on the ground, but in this particular scenario they were). Based on this, he deduces that the signals will reach M' at different moments according to the clock of M' (note that predicting when light will strike a physical clock according to that clock's own reading does not require you to analyze things from the rest frame of the clock, you can use the time dilation equation to predict this using a frame where the clock is in motion). A key point to understand here is that all frames must agree in their predictions about local events, like what times two clocks read at the moment they pass right next to one another, or what time a given clock reads when the light signal from a distant event reaches it. If this wasn't the case, then different reference frames would be more like parallel universes that would predict totally different events. For example, say the clock of M' was equipped with light sensors connected to a bomb, and that the bomb was programmed to explode if the sensors received strong light within some very short time interval according to the clock. If different frames didn't agree about local events, they could in this case disagree about whether the bomb exploded, and about whether the observer standing next to it was alive or dead! Different reference frames are just intended to be different ways of assigning position and time coordinates to the same set of events, nothing more.

So, with that in mind, we conclude that all frames must agree the light from the flashes reached M' at different moments, including the rest frame of M'. But how can this be compatible with the fact that, according to the fundamental postulates of special relativity, both flashes must also travel at the same speed c in the rest frame of M' (something that would not be true from a non-relativistic point of view, assuming they traveled at the same speed in the frame of M), and both happened at next to ends of a train that are equidistant from M' in this frame? There is only one possible way of making this consistent--in the rest frame of M', the flashes must have happened at different times (i.e. they are assigned different time-coordinates in this frame). There is nothing problematic about the idea that photons which were emitted at different times will reach an observer at different times, even if both signals were emitted at the same distance from the observer, and both traveled at the same speed relative to the observer.

Hypnosifl
  • 6,190
  • I think that you are saying that both M and M' would see the flash at the same time, but M would think M' would see the flash at a different time if M did not understand Relativity. That would explain the result, but it is rather obtuse and not what Einstein said. – Tuntable Aug 19 '19 at 05:03
  • @Tuntable - No, I'm not describing any mistaken prediction, it is genuinely true that in this scenario M' would see the light from each flash at different moments. This is clear if you think about what happened in the rest frame of M--in that frame, M' and M were at the same position at the time-coordinate that both flashes occured simultaneously, and both flashes happened an equal distance from from the position of M and M', but M' was heading towards the location of one flash and away from the other, so naturally the light from the flash he's heading towards will catch up with him 1st. – Hypnosifl Aug 19 '19 at 15:46
  • But the speed of light is relative to the observer. So the fact that M' is moving relative to M should not matter. A and B are not moving relative to M'. – Tuntable Aug 20 '19 at 07:29
  • @Tuntable - But as I said in my answer, all frames must agree about which events coincide locally. So if the rest frame of M predicts that the light from each flash hits M' at different moments (you agree that this is what would be predicted in the M frame right?), this must be predicted in all frames, including that of M'. You're correct that both beams travel at the same speed in the rest frame of M', so the resolution is that the explanation for why the light hit M' at diff. times in the rest frame of M' is that the flashes happened at different times originally in this frame. – Hypnosifl Aug 20 '19 at 11:40
  • (cont.) In general, two events at different locations which happen simultaneously in one frame (like the two flashes at different ends of the train which were simultaneous in the rest frame of M) are non-simultaneous in other frames, this is the relativity of simultaneity, and this thought-experiment of Einstein's is meant to illustrate how it follows from the assumption that light travels at the same speed in all frames (along with the implicit assumption that diff. frames agree about local events). – Hypnosifl Aug 20 '19 at 11:42
  • I only think M would think M' would see the B flash first if M did not understand relativity. I think that you are saying that it is because it is because it is. It is indeed very difficult to talk about relativity in a clear manner. And even Einstein failed in that part here. – Tuntable Aug 21 '19 at 11:01
  • @Tuntable - Why do you think M predicting that would be failing to understand relativity? Is it because you think the prediction of when the light would hit M' has to made in the rest frame of M', and it's incorrect to try to do so in the frame of M? If so you are misunderstanding something about how relativity works, simple physical questions about local events like when and where two entities will cross paths (in this case, M' and the light ray from either flash) can be answered in any frame, you're never obligated to use one specific frame to answer any frame-independent physical question. – Hypnosifl Aug 21 '19 at 12:51