1

I'm 10 light years from Earth and see Earth's clock/calendar reading 2000, including light travel time. In other words, I assume it's 2010 on Earth, but what I actually see is the year 2000 due to light travel time.

I now accelerate towards Earth to 0.8c in one second. What does Earth's calendar read to me now, including light travel time? The two answers I appear to be getting from my related question:

  • You still see Earth's calendar at the year 2000, plus maybe a few seconds.

  • You see Earth's calendar at 2004 (for example): it has jumped ahead several years during your acceleration.

I'm getting a variety of interesting answers to Rapid (ac/de)celeration in relativity does what to inertial clocks? but I don't think they're all consistent, which is perhaps my fault for phrasing the question ambiguously. I'm hoping this question is less ambiguous.

EDIT: This question is not a duplicate of my Rapid (ac/de)celeration in relativity does what to inertial clocks? because that other question involves acceleration, constant speed travel, deceleration, and ignores light travel time.

I believe this question is much simpler, although I agree the two are related.

The Fargo Fallacy

This section is in response to @WillO's and @hypnosifl's "driving to Fargo" analogy.

enter image description here

@WillO states

I am driving north toward Fargo. I say "Fargo is straight ahead, and always has been". Now I make a left and say "Fargo is to my right, and always has been".

[...]

Do you really not understand that this is shorthand for "Fargo is in the direction i now call right and always has been?" Or that my previous reckoning of Fargo as straight ahead has now become completely irrelevant? Or that if I continue to rely onthat [sic] reckoning, I'm going to get lost?

The statement "Fargo is to my right, and always has been is fundamentally inaccurate and can not be justified as shorthand.

Suppose I'm in Aberdeen and want to know where I was two hours ago (each arrow represents one hour). Using @WillO's logic, I must assume that Fargo was always to my right, and I was thus in Green Bay two hours ago.

In reality, my previous reckoning of Fargo is relevant. Here are some legitimate statements I could make:

  • For one hour, I was traveling from St Louis to Minneapolis, and Fargo was (pretty much) straight ahead.

  • For one hour, I was traveling from Minneapolis to Aberdeen, and Fargo was (pretty much) to my right.

  • If someone else had been traveling the Minneapolis-Aberdeen path an hour before I got there, arrived at Minneapolis at the same time I did, and was traveling at the same constant speed as I am traveling, they would have been in Green Bay when I was in St Louis.

  • Another way to say it: one hour after starting out, I hopped on to a ghost train that is doomed to travel forward westward at constant speed. I hopped on the train at Minneapolis and it took me an hour to get to Aberdeen. I can thus conclude the train was in Green Bay one hour ago, when I was in St Louis.

Converting any of these statements to Fargo is to my right, and always has been isn't "shorthand", it's simply false.

Fundamentally, the Fargo Fallacy confuses the history of an observer and the history of a reference frame. The "ghost train" in my example above is a reference frame: it always travels in the same direction at the same speed. However, the observer (me) wasn't on the train before it arrived at Minneapolis. In fact, it's possible that there was no one at all on the train on its journey from Green Bay to Minneapolis.

Once we understand this difference, and note that reference frames can exist without anyone in them, we can solve the problem. Ideally, we could solve this problem without using unpopulated reference frames (no ghost trains) at all. I'm checking to see if this may be possible, more details if that pans out. As @hypnosifl notes, bringing "north" into it breaks the analogy because "north" has some objective definition that doesn't depend on our choice of coordinate system. If we did have such a "north" in relativity, everything would be a lot easier, because we wouldn't have to rely on relative directions. Unforunately, the entire concept of special relativity is that all frames are relative.

The Fargo Fallacy also appears in Question/Doubt about Time Dilation Symmetry in Special Relativity: if two objects are 8 light years apart when at rest and approach each other, there is no frame of reference in which they will ever be more than 8 light years apart. However, one of the answers states:

when the light signal was sent, I was not just 4.8 light years away; I was 4.8 plus another (10.67 x .8) light years away --- a total of about 13.33 light years.

Once again, the confusion is between observers ("I") and reference frames. It was the reference frame that was 13.33 light years away, not the observer (who was never more than 8 light years away).

The 10/6 Conundrum

Consider this event: a beam of light leaves Earth in the year 2000.

Before I accelerate, this event occurs 10 light years away from me 10 years ago (since I am just now seeing this light beam). In other words, my coordinates for this event are $\{10,-10\}$ (note: I've re-oriented the x axis to face Earth, since that's the direction I will be traveling, but the conundrum occurs regardless of x axis orientation).

After I accelerate, I'm seeing the same light beam (roughly speaking), but the Earth is now only 6 light years away. I thus conclude the light beam left Earth 6 years ago (in my reference frame). Thus, my coordinates for this event are $\{6,-6\}$.

I suspect there's something wrong with my setup above, but can't figure out what it is.

Why am I suspicious? If the above is correct, the Lorentz transform for $0.8 c$ should convert between the two coordinate systems, but it doesn't.

Instead, it converts $\{10,-10\}$ to $\{30.,-30.\}$ (this is the same answer as @WillO gets), which says that, in the new, accelerated, frame, the light beam left Earth 30 light years away from my frame 30 years ago. Of course, I wasn't in this frame at the time: I only entered the frame in the year 2010 at t=0.

Oddly enough, it turns out the Lorentz transform for $-\frac{8 c}{17}$ does convert $\{10,-10\}$ to $\{6,-6\}$, but I have no idea how that velocity (a little less than $0.5 c$ and going in the opposite "wrong" direction [ie, away from Earth]) enters the picture.

Changing our definition of t=0 doesn't appear to help either. The $0.8 c$ Lorentz transform of $\{10,u-10\}$ is $\left\{30-\frac{4 u}{3},\frac{5 u}{3}-30\right\}$. There is no value for $u$ which yields $\{6,-6\}$.

Setting $u=18$ yields $\{6,0\}$ (which is interesting) giving us the correct distance, and setting $u=\frac{72}{5}$ yields $\left\{\frac{54}{5},-6\right\}$ giving us the time, but neither of these yields $\{6,-6\}$

Again, I feel I've done something wrong in setting up the above.

On the one hand, I have two reference frames, and the Lorentz transform should be able to convert between them, since it accounts for time dilation, Lorentz contraction and simultaneity.

On the other hand, well, it doesn't seem to actually do that.

  • None of the answers at the linked question is ambiguous, and except for the heavily downvoted one (which I have not read), all are correct, so I'm not sure why this needs to be asked again. – WillO Mar 29 '16 at 17:42
  • @WillO I said the answers were inconsistent, not ambiguous. I was accusing myself of ambiguity. –  Mar 29 '16 at 17:56
  • But the answers are not inconsistent. They answer different questions, but each makes it perfectly clear what question it's answering. – WillO Mar 29 '16 at 19:08
  • 1
    Such a rapid acceleration would break pretty much every imaginable clock, maybe with exception of those using radioactive decay. – CuriousOne Mar 31 '16 at 04:03
  • @WillO I could point out what I think are the inconsistencies on that answer, but it'll be a lot easier just to read the answers to this, simpler, question. –  Mar 31 '16 at 14:23
  • Reference frames do not travel and do not have histories. – WillO Apr 04 '16 at 17:39

5 Answers5

1

If you accelerate toward the earth, you say that the earth clocks have jumped forward 8 years. If you accelerate away from the earth, you say that earth clocks have jumped backward 8 years (give or take a small correction for the fact that you spread your acceleration over a second rather than accelerating instantly).

What you see on earth's clocks is of course essentially unchanged. (It would be completely unchanged if your acceleration were instantaneous.) This is because the light rays arriving at your ship are not going to divert their courses just because you happened to accelerate.

(Picture assumes instant acceleration; second-long acceleration introduces small corrections.)

enter image description here

WillO
  • 15,072
  • OK, but if Earth's clock jumps forward 8 years, it's now 2008 (according to me) and I'm 4.8 light years away, so I'd see light from 2003.2, which means I'd see a 3.2 year jump. Did you mean Earth's clock jumps forward 4.8 years so I'd say it's 2004.8 and still see light from 2000? –  Mar 31 '16 at 14:19
  • You have overlooked the fact that in your new frame, the earth is moving toward you and has always been. So you say this: "30 years ago, in 1970, earth clocks said 1990, and the earth was 30 light years away. Now, in 2000, earth clocks say 2008 (those slow clocks have moved only 18 years in the intervening 30 years!) and the earth is 6 light years away. I am seeing light that has taken 30 years to travel 30 light years, so I am seeing earth clocks that say 1990". Note that before you accelerated, you saw exactly the same light but interpreted it differently. – WillO Mar 31 '16 at 16:28
  • (I think your numbers are off by 10 years, but I get your point). You're saying that when I enter the new frame, I should pretend like I've been in the new frame the whole time? Sort of like walking into a room with a different view and asking "I wonder what this view looked like 10 minutes before I got here"? This is a very unusual interpretation of relativity, but your answers to other questions now make more sense to me. However, I'm not sure retroactiveness is the correct way to do things. –  Mar 31 '16 at 16:48
  • @barrycarter: This isn't a matter of retroactiveness. A frame is a way of assigning times and locations to events in spacetime. You prefer to use Frame A before you accelerate and you prefer to use Frame B afterward (that is, these are the frames that match your perceived experience). But both frames still exist. Each gives its own (correct and consistent) description of reality. – WillO Mar 31 '16 at 16:54
  • @barrycarter: Think of rotating the axes in euclidean space. This changes the x and y coordinates that you assign to every point. This is (or is not) "retroactive" in exactly the sense you're talking about. If you happen to be looking from one angle, you'll prefer one set of coordinates; if you happen to be looking from another, you'll prefer another; but both coordinate systems still exist. – WillO Mar 31 '16 at 16:56
  • And as far as this being an "unusual interpretation of relativity" -- it is in fact the standard, orthodox textbook presentation. – WillO Mar 31 '16 at 16:59
  • I've never seen it presented this way, but I'm a mathematician, not a physicist. Could you give me a general reference here? –  Mar 31 '16 at 17:03
  • I will tell you exactly what I tell my students: The library has a gazillion books on special relativity. They might differ in how they motivate the subject (some will talk of moving light clocks, others of other things) but when they get down to the actual results, they all say the same thing. Different students disagree about which are most readable. My advice is to browse several of them, find one that looks readable to you, make sure it has lots of problems to work on, take out that book, and don't let yourself move from one section to the next until you've solved the problems. – WillO Mar 31 '16 at 23:20
  • I assume the part about you having students is a joke, but I'm looking for a single reliable reference (ideally a free one) that explains how changing reference frames changes your own past (not the reference frame's past). –  Apr 01 '16 at 02:39
  • Changing frames does not change anyone's past. Events are what they are. Changing frames means assigning different numbers to the same events. If you lay down two axes on your tabletop, and then rotate those axes, nothing on the tabletop changes, but the vase that is at $(3,6)$ in one frame is at $(4,5)$ in another. A frame is a pair of axes, one labeled "location" and one labeled "time". (Or, in 3-D space, a four-tuple of axes.) Changing frames means rotating those axes. Nothing else changes. – WillO Apr 01 '16 at 02:45
  • Regarding a "single reliable reference", I'm not sure why you couldn't Google this yourself, but choose from here: http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Administrivia/rel_booklist.html – WillO Apr 01 '16 at 02:49
  • 1
    @barrycarter - What do you mean "changing reference frames changes your own past (not the reference frame's past)"? An instantaneous change in velocity doesn't change your past light cone from what it was immediately before the change, and your past light cone is the only non-reference-frame-dependent definition of "your past" I know of in relativity. Any other statements you may come across about a person's "past" changing because they changed velocity do depend on the choice of reference frame the person uses before and after the change. – Hypnosifl Apr 03 '16 at 15:29
  • @Hypnosifl Yes, I said I'm looking for a reliable reference that says that, because I don't believe it's true. –  Apr 03 '16 at 15:31
  • A reliable reference that says what exactly? I was saying that your statement "changing reference frames changes your own past (not the reference frame's past)" appears to be wrong to me, at least on the most straightforward interpretation. Changing velocities doesn't change your past in any frame-independent sense, it only changes what events you define as the past in your current reference frame if you make the choice to switch reference frames. – Hypnosifl Apr 03 '16 at 15:33
  • @Hypnosifl Yes. I'm saying that WillO made the claim "changing reference frames changes your own past (not the reference frame's past)", and that I dispute this claim. Thus, I have challenged him to provide a reference that supports his point of view (however, as the comment thread continues, WillO says that he hasn't made this claim at all). –  Apr 03 '16 at 15:38
  • I don't see any statement of WillO's that could be reasonably interpreted that way, so I assume you are probably misunderstanding something. Can you quote the particular statement(s) of his that led you to think he was saying that? Where do you think he said anyone's past changed in a way that wasn't frame-dependent? – Hypnosifl Apr 03 '16 at 15:40
  • @Hypnosifl So you say this: "30 years ago, in 1970, earth clocks said 1990, and the earth was 30 light years away. That's not true. Your past doesn't change. My point is that WillO was originally saying (and this unfortunately extends to other questions) that it's the observer's past that changes (false) and not the frame's past (true). –  Apr 03 '16 at 15:47
  • @barrycarter: I am driving north toward Fargo. I say "Fargo is straight ahead, and always has been". Now I make a left and say "Fargo is to my right, and always has been". Have I "retroactively changed my past"? Or have I just changed the frame I use to describe exactly the same reality? You persist in failing to see that changing your velocity in spacetime is perfectly analogous to changing your direction on the road. It changes the way you describe things. It doesn't mean your old descriptions were wrong, or that you've renounced them. It means you have a new frame. Period. – WillO Apr 03 '16 at 15:57
  • Please join me in the h bar to continue this discussion: http://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/71/the-h-bar –  Apr 03 '16 at 16:48
  • 1
    Fargo is to my right, and always has been. This statement is patently false as is the statement Fargo is straight ahead, and always has been, plus the two statements contradict each other. The correct statement: "When I was driving north, Fargo was straight ahead; once I turned left, Fargo was to my right; before I started driving north or after I stop driving west, I will have to recompute where Fargo is". This is your fundamental confusion between observers and reference frames. The observer's position for Fargo changes when the observer changes direction. –  Apr 04 '16 at 02:46
  • Do you really not understand that this is shorthand for "Fargo is in the direction i now call right and always has been?" Or that my previous reckoning of Fargo as straight ahead has now become completely irrelevant? Or that if I continue to rely onthat reckoning, I'm going to get lost? – WillO Apr 04 '16 at 02:59
  • 1
    @barrycarter - Bringing "north" into it breaks the analogy because "north" has some objective definition that doesn't depend on our choice of coordinate system (defined either as magnetic north or one of the two points where the rotation axis intersects the surface). Suppose I start 100 miles from Fargo, drive towards it for 50, then make a left turn. And before the turn say I use an x-y coordinate system where Fargo is in the y-direction and I drive in the +y-direction--I might start at x=0,y=0 with Fargo at x=0,y=100, and drive until I reach x=0,y=50, then turn so I am moving in the -x – Hypnosifl Apr 04 '16 at 04:16
  • 1
    direction. But say after the turn I choose to use a different coordinate system, one where I am driving in the y-direction after the turn, and where Fargo is at x=100,y=0 while my starting point was x=0,y=0 and I make the turn at x=50, y=0. Is it not true that relative to the coordinate system I am currently using--not the one I was using earlier--that Fargo was always at a greater x-coordinate than I was? Am I "changing the past" if I describe my initial journey before the turn in terms of this coordinate system, saying for example that I was moving in the +x-direction before the turn? – Hypnosifl Apr 04 '16 at 04:19
  • @Hypnosifl and WillO, this discussion is getting too long, so I edited my question to debunk the Fargo Fallacy. –  Apr 04 '16 at 16:53
  • The argument in your edited question depends on the the everyday meaning of phrases like "to my right" and "north" which makes them something other than pure coordinate conventions, so I don't think the argument really addresses my point about more abstract x-y coordinate systems we might draw on the surface of the Earth (which are more akin to the abstract x-y-z-t coordinate systems of relativity), or tells you what your answer would be to the two questions I ask at the end of my last comment. If you don't want this to get too long feel free to respond in the chat room you set up earlier. – Hypnosifl Apr 04 '16 at 17:03
  • 1
    But I'd add that "It was the reference frame that was 13.33 light years away, not the observer (who was never more than 8 light years away)" seems to show a basic misunderstanding--aside from proper distance measured along spacelike worldlines (akin to proper time along timelike worldlines), all other measures of distance in relativity are 100% frame-dependent, there is no "true" frame-independent answer to what the distance between two objects is. How can you measure distance physically without deciding what simultaneity convention to use, and who the physical ruler is at rest relative to? – Hypnosifl Apr 04 '16 at 17:08
0

Either way your time would slow down compared to Earths time while you where accelerating but I think the final difference between the two would depend on the direction you had traveled. Moving toward the Earth would be slightly different than moving away from Earth.

Bill Alsept
  • 4,043
  • Thanks, Bill I edited the question to clarify I am accelerating towards the Earth. –  Mar 29 '16 at 17:53
0

This additional detail is in response to the comment thread on my earlier answer. It provides every step of the calculations, which are perfectly standard and the sort of thing you will find in any reputable textbook. They are also exactly equivalent to what's going on in the spacetime diagrams you're curiouosly reluctant to study.

Start by labeling some events.

Event A: The spaceship suddenly accelerates to earth, with its clock saying 2010.

Event B: A clock on earth says 2000

Event C: A clock on earth says 2010.

Event D: A clock on earth says 2018

Frame I is the ship's frame an instant before the acceleration. In this frame, event $A$ is the origin, so event $A$ takes place at location $x=0$, time $t=0$.

In Frame I, Earth is 10 light years to the left of the spaceship, so events B,C and D take place at location x=-10. They occur at times $t=-10$, $t=0$, and $t=8$.

Now let's find the locations and times of these events in Frame II. We'll call those locations and times $x'$ and $t'$. We get these from formulas $x'=(x+tv)/\sqrt{1-v^2}$ and $t'=(t+xv)/\sqrt{1-v^2}$.

For event $A$, $x=0$ and $t=0$ (and $v=.8)$ so the Lorentz transform gives $x'=0$ and $t'=0$. That is, the switch from Frame I to Frame II does not change the coordinates of this event.

For event $B$, $x=-10$ and $t=-10$, so the Lorentz transform gives $x'=-30$, $t'=-30$. That is, in Frame II, this event took place 30 light years away and 30 years ago. Therefore its light is just arriving at the origin.

For event $C$, $x=-10$ and $t=0$, so the Lorentz transform gives $x'=-16.67$ and $t'=-13.33$, so this event took place $16.67 light years away and 13.33 years ago.

For event $D$, $x=-10$ and $t=8$, so the Lorentz transform gives $x'=-6$ and $t'=0$. That is, this event is taking place 6 light years away and is happening right now.

Notice that both frames have to describe the same reality. So here's a reality check: In Frame I, event B is 10 light years away and 10 years ago, so its light is just arriving at the origin. In Frame II, event B is 30 light years away and 30 years ago, so its light is just arriving at the origin. Sure enough, the frames agree --- as they must, because that light either does or does not arrive at the origin.

If the two frames were to disagree on what's actually happening at the origin, you'd know there was a mistake in the arithmetic. Because they agree, you can be pretty confident there's no mistake.

WillO
  • 15,072
  • I'm still looking this over, but what bugs me is that the Lorentz transforms are gamma*(x-v*t) and gamma*(t-v*x), with minuses instead of pluses, which drastically changes the results. Are you may using v = -0.8c (which flips the signs) because the ship and the Earth are approaching each other? –  Apr 01 '16 at 03:01
  • Yes, with your sign conventions I am taking $v=-.8$ – WillO Apr 01 '16 at 03:07
  • @barrycarter: Ps --- you are right that my whole story is off by 10 years from yours. My apologies for that but fortunately it's easy to translate by just adding 10 years to everything. – WillO Apr 01 '16 at 03:25
  • I've edited your answer to correct above. –  Apr 03 '16 at 14:09
  • OK, here's what I don't understand. Before acceleration, I see Earth at (-10, -10) (my x axis points away from the direction I'm about to accelerate, per your convention). After I see the Earth at (-6, -6). Am I understanding that correct? If so, where's the Lorentz transform that takes (-10,-10) to (-6,-6)? The only Lorentz transform that does this is for v = +8/17 which isn't the velocity or even the direction I accelerated. –  Apr 03 '16 at 14:14
  • The coordinates of Event B in Frame I are (-10,-10). The coordinates of Event B in Frame II are (-30,-30). These are related by the appropriate Lorentz transformation. The light from Event B reaches you just as you accelerate, so when you're using Frame I, you say it came from 10 years ago and when you're using Frame II, you say it came from 30 years ago. I don't understand the relevance of the coordinates $(-6,-6)$. Coordinates describe a particular event in a particular frame. What event are you trying to describe, and in what frame? – WillO Apr 03 '16 at 14:51
  • Could you join me in the h bar chat to resolve this? http://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/71/the-h-bar There are also other people there who can hopefully help. –  Apr 03 '16 at 15:06
  • The event: a beam of light left the Earth at the year 2000. Frame I: I'm seeing that just now and I'm 10 light years away, so it must've happened 10 years ago. Frame II: I'm seeing that just now and I'm 6 light years away, so it must've happened 6 years ago. Remember, you're see the same light (year 2000 light) both before and after acceleration. –  Apr 04 '16 at 02:57
  • No, in frame ii, the coordinates are -30,-30. You can believe the arithmetic or not --- if you dont believe it (or cant follow it) then there really is no way to explain this to you. – WillO Apr 04 '16 at 03:07
  • In frame i, the earth is 10 ly away and has always been stationary. In frame ii, the earth is 6 ly away and has always been moving. You are attempting a description in which the earth is 6 ly away and has been stationary. But there is no such frame. – WillO Apr 04 '16 at 17:47
0

I'm 10 light years from Earth and see Earth's clock/calendar reading 2000, including light travel time.

In other words, you see, literally physically see, the clock reading that time.

In other words, I assume it's 2010 on Earth,

This is the root of all the confusion. You shouldn't assume that; it's meaningless. Coordinate systems are meaningless. I don't know why so many people (including teachers) imagine that you have to use a coordinate system in which you're instantaneously at rest, and that people moving differently "disagree" with each other because they insist on using their self-centered coordinate system and saying that everyone else's is wrong. That's the exact opposite of the truth. The universe doesn't care about coordinates. If you have to use them (which you probably do because coordinate-free physics is more difficult than coordinate-free Euclidean geometry), then pick whatever makes the problem easiest, and don't switch between coordinate systems in the course of solving a single problem unless you really understand what you're doing, because it will most likely just lead to confusion and mistakes.

I now accelerate towards Earth to 0.8c in one second. What does Earth's calendar read to me now, including light travel time?

I'll assume that you accelerate uniformly, and it's one second of your proper time. Then with respect to coordinates in which you start accelerating from rest at $t=\tau=0$, and Earth is at rest far in the +x direction, and using natural units for the acceleration, your spacetime location as a function of your proper time is $(x(\tau),\ t(\tau)) = (\cosh(\tau), \ \sinh(\tau))$. Your velocity as a function of proper time is $x'(\tau)/t'(\tau) = \tanh(\tau)$ (those are derivatives, not primed coordinates). The reading on Earth's clock (up to an additive constant) as a function of your proper time is $x(\tau) + t(\tau) = e^\tau$. Plugging in 0.8 for your final speed, you get $\tau_f = \tanh^{-1}(0.8) = \ln 3$, and $\tau_i = 0$, so one second is $\ln 3$ in these units. The change in the reading of Earth's clock during your acceleration is $e^{\ln 3}-e^0 = 2$ exactly, or in SI units, $2/\ln 3 \approx 1.82$ seconds. (If I didn't screw up somewhere.)

I did this using coordinates because coordinates are often very convenient for solving physics problems. But it doesn't matter which coordinate system I used. I didn't choose coordinates in which you're instantaneously at rest throughout your acceleration, or in which anything is ever at x=0. I didn't even use standard units of distance or time. If I'd made any other choice, I would have gotten the same answer to any physically meaningful question, such as what you'll see on an actual clock with your actual physical eyes. I would not necessarily have gotten the same answer to meaningless questions such as what's allegedly going on "now" at some distant location according to some crazy person who insists that the coordinate time of their current favorite reference frame is the one true universal synchronous time.

The Fargo Fallacy

When you talk about the "Fargo Fallacy," I think you understand that you're just playing word games. Nothing about the nature of Fargo or your trip is at issue; it's all about what the word "right" means, and words can mean different things to different people. There is no experiment you can do to decide who's right about the meaning, because the universe doesn't care.

"Now" (except in combination with "here") is just like "right" in this regard. You'll never find its true meaning. It doesn't need to have one because it plays no role in any physical theory. Nothing in modern physics depends on a notion of distant simultaneity, and as far as we can tell, nothing in the real world does. I know I'm repeating myself but people so frequently get this so wrong that I feel like I have to beat it out of them.

The 10/6 Conundrum

[...]

Before I accelerate, this event occurs 10 light years away from me 10 years ago (since I am just now seeing this light beam). [...] After I accelerate, I'm seeing the same light beam (roughly speaking), but the Earth is now only 6 light years away.

No, it isn't. It may be 6 ly away in the coordinate system that you've just decided to switch to in the middle of solving your problem. Relativity doesn't require you to be so self-centered.

I thus conclude the light beam left Earth 6 years ago (in my reference frame). Thus, my coordinates for this event are {6,−6}.

I think you're simply overlooking that the Earth is not at rest with respect to these coordinates. When you plugged 0.8 into the length contraction formula, what you got is the intersection of the Earth's worldline (idealized as inertial in this problem) with the line $t' = 0$. That intersection is at $(x',t') = (6\,\mathrm{ly},0)$. Earth's worldline is the unique line through that point with the right slope, namely $x' = 6\,\mathrm{ly} - 0.8t'$. The intersections of that worldline with your light cone are the solutions of $\{x' = 6\,\mathrm{ly} - 0.8t',\; x'^2 = t'^2\}$, namely $(x',t') \in \{(30,-30),(10/3,10/3)\}\,\mathrm{ly}$.

Just think of it as Euclidean geometry, because it almost is, up to a minus sign in the Pythagorean formula. When using coordinates, you have to keep coordinate tuples together. It doesn't make sense to talk about y alone or t alone. (Except, I suppose, when there's a line with the equation y or t = constant. But such lines generally don't occur in nature, because the universe doesn't understand or respect any inertial coordinate system's idea of distant simultaneity.)

What the length contraction formula answers is the following question: you have a straight strip of uniform width in the Euclidean plane. When measuring its width along a line perpendicular to it, you get $w$ (say). If you measure along a line inclined at 45° to the perpendicular, you get a larger value, $w\sqrt2$. In general, along a line inclined at angle $\theta$, you get a width of $w\sec\theta$. The Minkowskian equivalent is $w\,\mathrm{sech}\,\alpha$, where $\alpha$ is the rapidity. It may look more familiar if you use the slope: for a slope $v$, the Euclidean formula is $w\sqrt{1+v^2}$ and the Minkowskian formula is $w\sqrt{1-v^2}$. The sign difference comes directly from the sign difference in the metric.

Why would you care about the width of a strip measured along a line that doesn't respect its intrinsic symmetry? You probably wouldn't, unless you're taking an undergraduate physics test set by a professor who thinks that this particular sort of measurement is extremely important for some reason.

benrg
  • 26,103
-1

Rapid acceleration does what to inertial frame clocks?

Nothing much. Like I said in response to your previous question.

I'm 10 light years from Earth and see Earth's clock/calendar reading 2000, including light travel time. In other words, I assume it's 2010 on Earth, but what I actually see is the year 2000 due to light travel time.

OK, that's nice and simple.

I now accelerate towards Earth to 0.8c in one second. What does Earth's calendar read to me now, including light travel time?

Pretty much the same. Your second is time-dilated compared to the Earth second, and the difference is a couple of tenths of a second. Not 14,000 seconds. The Andromeda Paradox is another one to beware of. You know full well that the time now on Earth doesn't change back and forth by 8 years when you accelerate and decelerate. You have a spaceship, not a time machine. And you felt the acceleration. You know that the Earth hasn't always been moving towards you.

The two answers I appear to be getting from my related question: 1) You still see Earth's calendar at the year 2000, plus maybe a few seconds. 2) You see Earth's calendar at 2004 (for example): it has jumped ahead several years during your acceleration.

The former is correct.

I'm getting a variety of interesting answers to Rapid (ac/de)celeration in relativity does what to inertial clocks? but I don't think they're all consistent, which is perhaps my fault for phrasing the question ambiguously. I'm hoping this question is less ambiguous.

I don't think your previous question was ambiguous.

This question is not a duplicate of my Rapid (ac/de)celeration in relativity does what to inertial clocks? because that other question involves acceleration, constant speed travel, deceleration, and ignores light travel time.

Fair enough. And like John Rennie said, at 0.8c it takes you 12.5 years to travel the 10 light years to Earth, during which time you see the Earth's calendar advance by 22.5 years because the light-travel-time is reducing as you approach.

I believe this question is much simpler, although I agree the two are related.

IMHO it's all very simple. Simpler than you might think.

John Duffield
  • 11,097