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Twin paradox

In physics, the twin paradox is a thought experiment in special relativity involving identical twins, one of whom makes a journey into space in a high-speed rocket and returns home to find that the twin who remained on Earth has aged more. This result appears puzzling because each twin sees the other twin as moving, and so, as a consequence of an incorrect[1][2] and naive[3][4] application of time dilation and the principle of relativity, each should paradoxically find the other to have aged less. However, this scenario can be resolved within the standard framework of special relativity: the travelling twin's trajectory involves two different inertial frames, one for the outbound journey and one for the inbound journey.[5] Another way of looking at it is to realize the travelling twin is undergoing acceleration, which makes them a non-inertial observer. In both views there is no symmetry between the spacetime paths of the twins. Therefore, the twin paradox is not actually a paradox in the sense of a logical contradiction. There is still debate as to the resolution of the twin paradox.[6]

Starting with Paul Langevin in 1911, there have been various explanations of this paradox. These explanations "can be grouped into those that focus on the effect of different standards of simultaneity in different frames, and those that designate the acceleration [experienced by the travelling twin] as the main reason".[7] Max von Laue argued in 1913 that since the traveling twin must be in two separate inertial frames, one on the way out and another on the way back, this frame switch is the reason for the aging difference.[8] Explanations put forth by Albert Einstein and Max Born invoked gravitational time dilation to explain the aging as a direct effect of acceleration.[9] However, it has been proven that neither general relativity,[10][11][12][13][14] nor even acceleration, are necessary to explain the effect, as the effect still applies if two astronauts pass each other at the turnaround point and synchronize their clocks at that point. Such observer can be thought of as a pair of observers, one travelling away from the starting point and another travelling toward it, passing by each other where the turnaround point would be. At this moment, the clock reading in the first observer is transferred to the second one, both maintaining constant speed, with both trip times being added at the end of their journey.[15]

History edit

In his famous paper on special relativity in 1905, Albert Einstein deduced that when two clocks were brought together and synchronized, and then one was moved away and brought back, the clock which had undergone the traveling would be found to be lagging behind the clock which had stayed put.[A 1] Einstein considered this to be a natural consequence of special relativity, not a paradox as some suggested, and in 1911, he restated and elaborated on this result as follows (with physicist Robert Resnick's comments following Einstein's):[A 2][16]

Einstein: If we placed a living organism in a box ... one could arrange that the organism, after any arbitrary lengthy flight, could be returned to its original spot in a scarcely altered condition, while corresponding organisms which had remained in their original positions had already long since given way to new generations. For the moving organism, the lengthy time of the journey was a mere instant, provided the motion took place with approximately the speed of light.
Resnick: If the stationary organism is a man and the traveling one is his twin, then the traveler returns home to find his twin brother much aged compared to himself. The paradox centers on the contention that, in relativity, either twin could regard the other as the traveler, in which case each should find the other younger—a logical contradiction. This contention assumes that the twins' situations are symmetrical and interchangeable, an assumption that is not correct. Furthermore, the accessible experiments have been done and support Einstein's prediction.

In 1911, Paul Langevin gave a "striking example" by describing the story of a traveler making a trip at a Lorentz factor of γ = 100 (99.995% the speed of light). The traveler remains in a projectile for one year of his time, and then reverses direction. Upon return, the traveler will find that he has aged two years, while 200 years have passed on Earth. During the trip, both the traveler and Earth keep sending signals to each other at a constant rate, which places Langevin's story among the Doppler shift versions of the twin paradox. The relativistic effects upon the signal rates are used to account for the different aging rates. The asymmetry that occurred because only the traveler underwent acceleration is used to explain why there is any difference at all,[17][18] because "any change of velocity, or any acceleration has an absolute meaning".[A 3]

Max von Laue (1911, 1913) elaborated on Langevin's explanation. Using Hermann Minkowski's spacetime formalism, Laue went on to demonstrate that the world lines of the inertially moving bodies maximize the proper time elapsed between two events. He also wrote that the asymmetric aging is completely accounted for by the fact that the astronaut twin travels in two separate frames, while the Earth twin remains in one frame, and the time of acceleration can be made arbitrarily small compared with the time of inertial motion.[A 4][A 5][A 6] Eventually, Lord Halsbury and others removed any acceleration by introducing the "three-brother" approach. The traveling twin transfers his clock reading to a third one, traveling in the opposite direction. Another way of avoiding acceleration effects is the use of the relativistic Doppler effect (see §What it looks like: the relativistic Doppler shift below).

Neither Einstein nor Langevin considered such results to be problematic: Einstein only called it "peculiar" while Langevin presented it as a consequence of absolute acceleration.[A 7] Both men argued that, from the time differential illustrated by the story of the twins, no self-contradiction could be constructed. In other words, neither Einstein nor Langevin saw the story of the twins as constituting a challenge to the self-consistency of relativistic physics.

Specific example edit

Consider a space ship traveling from Earth to the nearest star system: a distance d = 4 light years away, at a speed v = 0.8c (i.e., 80% of the speed of light).

To make the numbers easy, the ship is assumed to attain full speed in a negligible time upon departure (even though it would actually take about 9 months accelerating at g to get up to speed). Similarly, at the end of the outgoing trip, the change in direction needed to start the return trip is assumed to occur in a negligible time. This can also be modelled by assuming that the ship is already in motion at the beginning of the experiment and that the return event is modelled by a Dirac delta distribution acceleration.[19]

The parties will observe the situation as follows:[20][21]

Earth perspective edit

The Earth-based mission control reasons about the journey this way: the round trip will take t = 2d/v = 10 years in Earth time (i.e. everybody on Earth will be 10 years older when the ship returns). The amount of time as measured on the ship's clocks and the aging of the travelers during their trip will be reduced by the factor  , the reciprocal of the Lorentz factor (time dilation). In this case α = 0.6 and the travelers will have aged only 0.6 × 10 = 6 years when they return.

Travellers' perspective edit

The ship's crew members also calculate the particulars of their trip from their perspective. They know that the distant star system and the Earth are moving relative to the ship at speed v during the trip. In their rest frame the distance between the Earth and the star system is α d = 0.6 × 4 = 2.4 light years (length contraction), for both the outward and return journeys. Each half of the journey takes α d / v = 2.4 / 0.8 = 3 years, and the round trip takes twice as long (6 years). Their calculations show that they will arrive home having aged 6 years. The travelers' final calculation about their aging is in complete agreement with the calculations of those on Earth, though they experience the trip quite differently from those who stay at home.

Conclusion edit

Readings on Earth's and spaceship's clocks
Event Earth
(years)
Spaceship
(years)
Departure 0 0
End of outgoing trip =
Beginning of ingoing trip
5 3
Arrival 10 6

No matter what method they use to predict the clock readings, everybody will agree about them. If twins are born on the day the ship leaves, and one goes on the journey while the other stays on Earth, they will meet again when the traveler is 6 years old and the stay-at-home twin is 10 years old.

Resolution of the paradox in special relativity edit

The paradoxical aspect of the twins' situation arises from the fact that at any given moment the travelling twin's clock is running slow in the earthbound twin's inertial frame, but based on the relativity principle one could equally argue that the earthbound twin's clock is running slow in the travelling twin's inertial frame.[22][23][24] One proposed resolution is based on the fact that the earthbound twin is at rest in the same inertial frame throughout the journey, while the travelling twin is not: in the simplest version of the thought-experiment, the travelling twin switches at the midpoint of the trip from being at rest in an inertial frame which moves in one direction (away from the Earth) to being at rest in an inertial frame which moves in the opposite direction (towards the Earth). In this approach, determining which observer switches frames and which does not is crucial. Although both twins can legitimately claim that they are at rest in their own frame, only the traveling twin experiences acceleration when the spaceship engines are turned on. This acceleration, measurable with an accelerometer, makes his rest frame temporarily non-inertial. This reveals a crucial asymmetry between the twins' perspectives: although we can predict the aging difference from both perspectives, we need to use different methods to obtain correct results.

Role of acceleration edit

Although some solutions attribute a crucial role to the acceleration of the travelling twin at the time of the turnaround,[22][23][24][25] others note that the effect also arises if one imagines two separate travellers, one outward-going and one inward-coming, who pass each other and synchronize their clocks at the point corresponding to "turnaround" of a single traveller. In this version, physical acceleration of the travelling clock plays no direct role;[26][27][19] "the issue is how long the world-lines are, not how bent".[28] The length referred to here is the Lorentz-invariant length or "proper time interval" of a trajectory which corresponds to the elapsed time measured by a clock following that trajectory (see Section Difference in elapsed time as a result of differences in twins' spacetime paths below). In Minkowski spacetime, the travelling twin must feel a different history of accelerations from the earthbound twin, even if this just means accelerations of the same size separated by different amounts of time,[28] however "even this role for acceleration can be eliminated in formulations of the twin paradox in curved spacetime, where the twins can fall freely along space-time geodesics between meetings".[7]

Relativity of simultaneity edit

 
Minkowski diagram of the twin paradox. There is a difference between the trajectories of the twins: the trajectory of the ship is equally divided between two different inertial frames, while the Earth-based twin stays in the same inertial frame.

For a moment-by-moment understanding of how the time difference between the twins unfolds, one must understand that in special relativity there is no concept of absolute present. For different inertial frames there are different sets of events that are simultaneous in that frame. This relativity of simultaneity means that switching from one inertial frame to another requires an adjustment in what slice through spacetime counts as the "present". In the spacetime diagram on the right, drawn for the reference frame of the Earth-based twin, that twin's world line coincides with the vertical axis (his position is constant in space, moving only in time). On the first leg of the trip, the second twin moves to the right (black sloped line); and on the second leg, back to the left. Blue lines show the planes of simultaneity for the traveling twin during the first leg of the journey; red lines, during the second leg. Just before turnaround, the traveling twin calculates the age of the Earth-based twin by measuring the interval along the vertical axis from the origin to the upper blue line. Just after turnaround, if he recalculates, he will measure the interval from the origin to the lower red line. In a sense, during the U-turn the plane of simultaneity jumps from blue to red and very quickly sweeps over a large segment of the world line of the Earth-based twin. When one transfers from the outgoing inertial frame to the incoming inertial frame there is a jump discontinuity in the age of the Earth-based twin[22][23][27][29][30] (6.4 years in the example above).

A non space-time approach edit

As mentioned above, an "out and back" twin paradox adventure may incorporate the transfer of clock reading from an "outgoing" astronaut to an "incoming" astronaut, thus eliminating the effect of acceleration. Also, the physical acceleration of clocks does not contribute to the kinematical effects of special relativity. Rather, in special relativity, the time differential between two reunited clocks is produced purely by uniform inertial motion, as discussed in Einstein's original 1905 relativity paper,[26] as well as in all subsequent kinematical derivations of the Lorentz transformations.

Because spacetime diagrams incorporate Einstein's clock synchronization (with its lattice of clocks methodology), there will be a requisite jump in the reading of the Earth clock time made by a "suddenly returning astronaut" who inherits a "new meaning of simultaneity" in keeping with a new clock synchronization dictated by the transfer to a different inertial frame, as explained in Spacetime Physics by John A. Wheeler.[29]

If, instead of incorporating Einstein's clock synchronization (lattice of clocks), the astronaut (outgoing and incoming) and the Earth-based party regularly update each other on the status of their clocks by way of sending radio signals (which travel at light speed), then all parties will note an incremental buildup of asymmetry in time-keeping, beginning at the "turn around" point. Prior to the "turn around", each party regards the other party's clock to be recording time differently from his own, but the noted difference is symmetrical between the two parties. After the "turn around", the noted differences are not symmetrical, and the asymmetry grows incrementally until the two parties are reunited. Upon finally reuniting, this asymmetry can be seen in the actual difference showing on the two reunited clocks.[31]

The equivalence of biological aging and clock time-keeping edit

All processes—chemical, biological, measuring apparatus functioning, human perception involving the eye and brain, the communication of force—are constrained by the speed of light. There is clock functioning at every level, dependent on light speed and the inherent delay at even the atomic level. Biological aging, therefore, is in no way different from clock time-keeping.[32] This means that biological aging would be slowed in the same manner as a clock.

What it looks like: the relativistic Doppler shift edit

In view of the frame-dependence of simultaneity for events at different locations in space, some treatments prefer a more phenomenological approach, describing what the twins would observe if each sent out a series of regular radio pulses, equally spaced in time according to the emitter's clock.[27] This is equivalent to asking, if each twin sent a video feed of themselves to each other, what do they see in their screens? Or, if each twin always carried a clock indicating his age, what time would each see in the image of their distant twin and his clock?

Shortly after departure, the traveling twin sees the stay-at-home twin with no time delay. At arrival, the image in the ship screen shows the staying twin as he was 1 year after launch, because radio emitted from Earth 1 year after launch gets to the other star 4 years afterwards and meets the ship there. During this leg of the trip, the traveling twin sees his own clock advance 3 years and the clock in the screen advance 1 year, so it seems to advance at 13 the normal rate, just 20 image seconds per ship minute. This combines the effects of time dilation due to motion (by factor ε = 0.6, five years on Earth are 3 years on ship) and the effect of increasing light-time-delay (which grows from 0 to 4 years).

Of course, the observed frequency of the transmission is also 13 the frequency of the transmitter (a reduction in frequency; "red-shifted"). This is called the relativistic Doppler effect. The frequency of clock-ticks (or of wavefronts) which one sees from a source with rest frequency frest is

 

when the source is moving directly away. This is fobs = 13frest for v/c = 0.8.

As for the stay-at-home twin, he gets a slowed signal from the ship for 9 years, at a frequency 13 the transmitter frequency. During these 9 years, the clock of the traveling twin in the screen seems to advance 3 years, so both twins see the image of their sibling aging at a rate only 13 their own rate. Expressed in other way, they would both see the other's clock run at 13 their own clock speed. If they factor out of the calculation the fact that the light-time delay of the transmission is increasing at a rate of 0.8 seconds per second, both can work out that the other twin is aging slower, at 60% rate.

Then the ship turns back toward home. The clock of the staying twin shows "1 year after launch" in the screen of the ship, and during the 3 years of the trip back it increases up to "10 years after launch", so the clock in the screen seems to be advancing 3 times faster than usual.

When the source is moving towards the observer, the observed frequency is higher ("blue-shifted") and given by

 

This is fobs = 3frest for v/c = 0.8.

As for the screen on Earth, it shows that trip back beginning 9 years after launch, and the traveling clock in the screen shows that 3 years have passed on the ship. One year later, the ship is back home and the clock shows 6 years. So, during the trip back, both twins see their sibling's clock going 3 times faster than their own. Factoring out the fact that the light-time-delay is decreasing by 0.8 seconds every second, each twin calculates that the other twin is aging at 60% his own aging speed.

 
Light paths for images exchanged during trip
Left: Earth to ship. Right: Ship to Earth.
Red lines indicate low frequency images are received, blue lines indicate high frequency images are received

The xt (space–time) diagrams at left show the paths of light signals traveling between Earth and ship (1st diagram) and between ship and Earth (2nd diagram). These signals carry the images of each twin and his age-clock to the other twin. The vertical black line is the Earth's path through spacetime and the other two sides of the triangle show the ship's path through spacetime (as in the Minkowski diagram above). As far as the sender is concerned, he transmits these at equal intervals (say, once an hour) according to his own clock; but according to the clock of the twin receiving these signals, they are not being received at equal intervals.

After the ship has reached its cruising speed of 0.8c, each twin would see 1 second pass in the received image of the other twin for every 3 seconds of his own time. That is, each would see the image of the other's clock going slow, not just slow by the ε factor 0.6, but even slower because light-time-delay is increasing 0.8 seconds per second. This is shown in the figures by red light paths. At some point, the images received by each twin change so that each would see 3 seconds pass in the image for every second of his own time. That is, the received signal has been increased in frequency by the Doppler shift. These high frequency images are shown in the figures by blue light paths.

The asymmetry in the Doppler shifted images edit

The asymmetry between the Earth and the space ship is manifested in this diagram by the fact that more blue-shifted (fast aging) images are received by the ship. Put another way, the space ship sees the image change from a red-shift (slower aging of the image) to a blue-shift (faster aging of the image) at the midpoint of its trip (at the turnaround, 3 years after departure); the Earth sees the image of the ship change from red-shift to blue shift after 9 years (almost at the end of the period that the ship is absent). In the next section, one will see another asymmetry in the images: the Earth twin sees the ship twin age by the same amount in the red and blue shifted images; the ship twin sees the Earth twin age by different amounts in the red and blue shifted images.

Calculation of elapsed time from the Doppler diagram edit

The twin on the ship sees low frequency (red) images for 3 years. During that time, he would see the Earth twin in the image grow older by 3/3 = 1 year. He then sees high frequency (blue) images during the back trip of 3 years. During that time, he would see the Earth twin in the image grow older by 3 × 3 = 9 years. When the journey is finished, the image of the Earth twin has aged by 1 + 9 = 10 years.

The Earth twin sees 9 years of slow (red) images of the ship twin, during which the ship twin ages (in the image) by 9/3 = 3 years. He then sees fast (blue) images for the remaining 1 year until the ship returns. In the fast images, the ship twin ages by 1 × 3 = 3 years. The total aging of the ship twin in the images received by Earth is 3 + 3 = 6 years, so the ship twin returns younger (6 years as opposed to 10 years on Earth).

The distinction between what they see and what they calculate edit

To avoid confusion, note the distinction between what each twin sees and what each would calculate. Each sees an image of his twin which he knows originated at a previous time and which he knows is Doppler shifted. He does not take the elapsed time in the image as the age of his twin now.

  • If he wants to calculate when his twin was the age shown in the image (i.e. how old he himself was then), he has to determine how far away his twin was when the signal was emitted—in other words, he has to consider simultaneity for a distant event.
  • If he wants to calculate how fast his twin was aging when the image was transmitted, he adjusts for the Doppler shift. For example, when he receives high frequency images (showing his twin aging rapidly) with frequency  , he does not conclude that the twin was aging that rapidly when the image was generated, any more than he concludes that the siren of an ambulance is emitting the frequency he hears. He knows that the Doppler effect has increased the image frequency by the factor 1 / (1 − v/c). Therefore, he calculates that his twin was aging at the rate of
 

when the image was emitted. A similar calculation reveals that his twin was aging at the same reduced rate of εfrest in all low frequency images.

Simultaneity in the Doppler shift calculation edit

It may be difficult to see where simultaneity came into the Doppler shift calculation, and indeed the calculation is often preferred because one does not have to worry about simultaneity. As seen above, the ship twin can convert his received Doppler-shifted rate to a slower rate of the clock of the distant clock for both red and blue images. If he ignores simultaneity, he might say his twin was aging at the reduced rate throughout the journey and therefore should be younger than he is. He is now back to square one, and has to take into account the change in his notion of simultaneity at the turnaround. The rate he can calculate for the image (corrected for Doppler effect) is the rate of the Earth twin's clock at the moment it was sent, not at the moment it was received. Since he receives an unequal number of red and blue shifted images, he should realize that the red and blue shifted emissions were not emitted over equal time periods for the Earth twin, and therefore he must account for simultaneity at a distance.

Viewpoint of the traveling twin edit

During the turnaround, the traveling twin is in an accelerated reference frame. According to the equivalence principle, the traveling twin may analyze the turnaround phase as if the stay-at-home twin were freely falling in a gravitational field and as if the traveling twin were stationary. A 1918 paper by Einstein presents a conceptual sketch of the idea.[A 8] From the viewpoint of the traveler, a calculation for each separate leg, ignoring the turnaround, leads to a result in which the Earth clocks age less than the traveler. For example, if the Earth clocks age 1 day less on each leg, the amount that the Earth clocks will lag behind amounts to 2 days. The physical description of what happens at turnaround has to produce a contrary effect of double that amount: 4 days' advancing of the Earth clocks. Then the traveler's clock will end up with a net 2-day delay on the Earth clocks, in agreement with calculations done in the frame of the stay-at-home twin.

The mechanism for the advancing of the stay-at-home twin's clock is gravitational time dilation. When an observer finds that inertially moving objects are being accelerated with respect to themselves, those objects are in a gravitational field insofar as relativity is concerned. For the traveling twin at turnaround, this gravitational field fills the universe. In a weak field approximation, clocks tick at a rate of t' = t (1 + Φ / c2) where Φ is the difference in gravitational potential. In this case, Φ = gh where g is the acceleration of the traveling observer during turnaround and h is the distance to the stay-at-home twin. The rocket is firing towards the stay-at-home twin, thereby placing that twin at a higher gravitational potential. Due to the large distance between the twins, the stay-at-home twin's clocks will appear to be sped up enough to account for the difference in proper times experienced by the twins. It is no accident that this speed-up is enough to account for the simultaneity shift described above. The general relativity solution for a static homogeneous gravitational field and the special relativity solution for finite acceleration produce identical results.[33]

Other calculations have been done for the traveling twin (or for any observer who sometimes accelerates), which do not involve the equivalence principle, and which do not involve any gravitational fields. Such calculations are based only on the special theory, not the general theory, of relativity. One approach calculates surfaces of simultaneity by considering light pulses, in accordance with Hermann Bondi's idea of the k-calculus.[34] A second approach calculates a straightforward but technically complicated integral to determine how the traveling twin measures the elapsed time on the stay-at-home clock. An outline of this second approach is given in a separate section below.

Difference in elapsed time as a result of differences in twins' spacetime paths edit

 
Twin paradox employing a rocket following an acceleration profile in terms of coordinate time T and by setting c=1: Phase 1 (a=0.6, T=2); Phase 2 (a=0, T=2); Phase 3-4 (a=-0.6, 2T=4); Phase 5 (a=0, T=2); Phase 6 (a=0.6, T=2). The twins meet at T=12 and τ=9.33. The blue numbers indicate the coordinate time T in the inertial frame of the stay-at-home-twin, the red numbers the proper time τ of the rocket-twin, and "a" is the proper acceleration. The thin red lines represent lines of simultaneity in terms of the different momentary inertial frames of the rocket-twin. The points marked by blue numbers 2, 4, 8 and 10 indicate the times when the acceleration changes direction.

The following paragraph shows several things:

  • how to employ a precise mathematical approach in calculating the differences in the elapsed time
  • how to prove exactly the dependency of the elapsed time on the different paths taken through spacetime by the twins
  • how to quantify the differences in elapsed time
  • how to calculate proper time as a function (integral) of coordinate time

Let clock K be associated with the "stay at home twin". Let clock K' be associated with the rocket that makes the trip. At the departure event both clocks are set to 0.

Phase 1: Rocket (with clock K') embarks with constant proper acceleration a during a time Ta as measured by clock K until it reaches some velocity V.
Phase 2: Rocket keeps coasting at velocity V during some time Tc according to clock K.
Phase 3: Rocket fires its engines in the opposite direction of K during a time Ta according to clock K until it is at rest with respect to clock K. The constant proper acceleration has the value −a, in other words the rocket is decelerating.
Phase 4: Rocket keeps firing its engines in the opposite direction of K, during the same time Ta according to clock K, until K' regains the same speed V with respect to K, but now towards K (with velocity −V).
Phase 5: Rocket keeps coasting towards K at speed V during the same time Tc according to clock K.
Phase 6: Rocket again fires its engines in the direction of K, so it decelerates with a constant proper acceleration a during a time Ta, still according to clock K, until both clocks reunite.

Knowing that the clock K remains inertial (stationary), the total accumulated proper time Δτ of clock K' will be given by the integral function of coordinate time Δt

 

where v(t) is the coordinate velocity of clock K' as a function of t according to clock K, and, e.g. during phase 1, given by

 

This integral can be calculated for the 6 phases:[35]

Phase 1  
Phase 2  
Phase 3  
Phase 4  
Phase 5  
Phase 6  

where a is the proper acceleration, felt by clock K' during the acceleration phase(s) and where the following relations hold between V, a and Ta:

 
 

So the traveling clock K' will show an elapsed time of

 

which can be expressed as

 

whereas the stationary clock K shows an elapsed time of

 

which is, for every possible value of a, Ta, Tc and V, larger than the reading of clock K':

 

Difference in elapsed times: how to calculate it from the ship edit

 
Twin paradox employing a rocket following an acceleration profile in terms of proper time τ and by setting c=1: Phase 1 (a=0.6, τ=2); Phase 2 (a=0, τ=2); Phase 3-4 (a=-0.6, 2τ=4); Phase 5 (a=0, τ=2); Phase 6 (a=0.6, τ=2). The twins meet at T=17.3 and τ=12.

In the standard proper time formula

 

Δτ represents the time of the non-inertial (travelling) observer K' as a function of the elapsed time Δt of the inertial (stay-at-home) observer K for whom observer K' has velocity v(t) at time t.

To calculate the elapsed time Δt of the inertial observer K as a function of the elapsed time Δτ of the non-inertial observer K', where only quantities measured by K' are accessible, the following formula can be used:[19]

 

where a(τ) is the proper acceleration of the non-inertial observer K' as measured by himself (for instance with an accelerometer) during the whole round-trip. The Cauchy–Schwarz inequality can be used to show that the inequality Δt > Δτ follows from the previous expression:

 

Using the Dirac delta function to model the infinite acceleration phase in the standard case of the traveller having constant speed v during the outbound and the inbound trip, the formula produces the known result:

 

In the case where the accelerated observer K' departs from K with zero initial velocity, the general equation reduces to the simpler form:

 

which, in the smooth version of the twin paradox where the traveller has constant proper acceleration phases, successively given by a, −a, −a, a, results in[19]

 

where the convention c = 1 is used, in accordance with the above expression with acceleration phases Ta = Δt/4 and inertial (coasting) phases Tc = 0.

A rotational version edit

Twins Bob and Alice inhabit a space station in circular orbit around a massive body in space. Bob suits up and exits the station. While Alice remains inside the station, continuing to orbit with it as before, Bob uses a rocket propulsion system to cease orbiting and hover where he was. When the station completes an orbit and returns to Bob, he rejoins Alice. Alice is now younger than Bob.[36] In addition to rotational acceleration, Bob must decelerate to become stationary and then accelerate again to match the orbital speed of the space station.

No twin paradox in an absolute frame of reference edit

Einstein's conclusion of an actual difference in registered clock times (or aging) between reunited parties caused Paul Langevin to posit an actual, albeit experimentally indiscernible, absolute frame of reference:

In 1911, Langevin wrote: "A uniform translation in the aether has no experimental sense. But because of this it should not be concluded, as has sometimes happened prematurely, that the concept of aether must be abandoned, that the aether is non-existent and inaccessible to experiment. Only a uniform velocity relative to it cannot be detected, but any change of velocity .. has an absolute sense."[37]

In 1913, Henri Poincaré's posthumous Last Essays were published and there he had restated his position: "Today some physicists want to adopt a new convention. It is not that they are constrained to do so; they consider this new convention more convenient; that is all. And those who are not of this opinion can legitimately retain the old one."[38]

In the relativity of Poincaré and Hendrik Lorentz, which assumes an absolute (though experimentally indiscernible) frame of reference, no paradox arises due to the fact that clock slowing (along with length contraction and velocity) is regarded as an actuality, hence the actual time differential between the reunited clocks.

In that interpretation, a party at rest with the totality of the cosmos (at rest with the barycenter of the universe, or at rest with a possible ether) would have the maximum rate of time-keeping and have non-contracted length. All the effects of Einstein's special relativity (consistent light-speed measure, as well as symmetrically measured clock-slowing and length-contraction across inertial frames) fall into place.

That interpretation of relativity, which John A. Wheeler calls "ether theory B (length contraction plus time contraction)", did not gain as much traction as Einstein's, which simply disregarded any deeper reality behind the symmetrical measurements across inertial frames. There is no physical test which distinguishes one interpretation from the other.[39]

In 2005, Robert B. Laughlin (Physics Nobel Laureate, Stanford University), wrote about the nature of space: "It is ironic that Einstein's most creative work, the general theory of relativity, should boil down to conceptualizing space as a medium when his original premise [in special relativity] was that no such medium existed ... The word 'ether' has extremely negative connotations in theoretical physics because of its past association with opposition to relativity. This is unfortunate because, stripped of these connotations, it rather nicely captures the way most physicists actually think about the vacuum. ... Relativity actually says nothing about the existence or nonexistence of matter pervading the universe, only that any such matter must have relativistic symmetry (i.e., as measured)."[40]

In Special Relativity (1968), A. P. French wrote: "Note, though, that we are appealing to the reality of A's acceleration, and to the observability of the inertial forces associated with it. Would such effects as the twin paradox (specifically -- the time keeping differential between reunited clocks) exist if the framework of fixed stars and distant galaxies were not there? Most physicists would say no. Our ultimate definition of an inertial frame may indeed be that it is a frame having zero acceleration with respect to the matter of the universe at large."[41]

See also edit

Primary sources edit

  1. ^ Einstein, Albert (1905). "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies". Annalen der Physik. 17 (10): 891 (end of §4). Bibcode:1905AnP...322..891E. doi:10.1002/andp.19053221004.
  2. ^ Einstein, Albert (1911). "Die Relativitäts-Theorie". Naturforschende Gesellschaft, Zürich, Vierteljahresschrift. 56: 1–14.
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Further reading edit

The ideal clock

The ideal clock is a clock whose action depends only on its instantaneous velocity, and is independent of any acceleration of the clock.

  • Wolfgang Rindler (2006). "Time dilation". Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological. Oxford University Press. p. 43. ISBN 0-19-856731-6.
Gravitational time dilation; time dilation in circular motion
  • John A Peacock (2001). Cosmological Physics. Cambridge University Press. p. 8. ISBN 0-521-42270-1.
  • Silvio Bonometto; Vittorio Gorini; Ugo Moschella (2002). Modern Cosmology. CRC Press. p. 12. ISBN 0-7503-0810-9.
  • Patrick Cornille (2003). Advanced Electromagnetism and Vacuum Physics. World Scientific. p. 180. ISBN 981-238-367-0.

External links edit

  • Twin Paradox overview 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine in the Usenet Physics FAQ
  • The twin paradox: Is the symmetry of time dilation paradoxical? From Einsteinlight: Relativity in animations and film clips.
  • FLASH Animations: from John de Pillis. (Scene 1): "View" from the Earth twin's point of view. (Scene 2): "View" from the traveling twin's point of view.
  • Relativity Science Calculator - Twin Clock Paradox

twin, paradox, clock, problem, redirects, here, mathematical, problems, involving, positions, hands, clock, face, clock, angle, problem, physics, twin, paradox, thought, experiment, special, relativity, involving, identical, twins, whom, makes, journey, into, . Clock problem redirects here For mathematical problems involving the positions of the hands on a clock face see Clock angle problem In physics the twin paradox is a thought experiment in special relativity involving identical twins one of whom makes a journey into space in a high speed rocket and returns home to find that the twin who remained on Earth has aged more This result appears puzzling because each twin sees the other twin as moving and so as a consequence of an incorrect 1 2 and naive 3 4 application of time dilation and the principle of relativity each should paradoxically find the other to have aged less However this scenario can be resolved within the standard framework of special relativity the travelling twin s trajectory involves two different inertial frames one for the outbound journey and one for the inbound journey 5 Another way of looking at it is to realize the travelling twin is undergoing acceleration which makes them a non inertial observer In both views there is no symmetry between the spacetime paths of the twins Therefore the twin paradox is not actually a paradox in the sense of a logical contradiction There is still debate as to the resolution of the twin paradox 6 Starting with Paul Langevin in 1911 there have been various explanations of this paradox These explanations can be grouped into those that focus on the effect of different standards of simultaneity in different frames and those that designate the acceleration experienced by the travelling twin as the main reason 7 Max von Laue argued in 1913 that since the traveling twin must be in two separate inertial frames one on the way out and another on the way back this frame switch is the reason for the aging difference 8 Explanations put forth by Albert Einstein and Max Born invoked gravitational time dilation to explain the aging as a direct effect of acceleration 9 However it has been proven that neither general relativity 10 11 12 13 14 nor even acceleration are necessary to explain the effect as the effect still applies if two astronauts pass each other at the turnaround point and synchronize their clocks at that point Such observer can be thought of as a pair of observers one travelling away from the starting point and another travelling toward it passing by each other where the turnaround point would be At this moment the clock reading in the first observer is transferred to the second one both maintaining constant speed with both trip times being added at the end of their journey 15 Contents 1 History 2 Specific example 2 1 Earth perspective 2 2 Travellers perspective 2 3 Conclusion 3 Resolution of the paradox in special relativity 3 1 Role of acceleration 3 2 Relativity of simultaneity 4 A non space time approach 5 The equivalence of biological aging and clock time keeping 6 What it looks like the relativistic Doppler shift 6 1 The asymmetry in the Doppler shifted images 7 Calculation of elapsed time from the Doppler diagram 7 1 The distinction between what they see and what they calculate 7 2 Simultaneity in the Doppler shift calculation 8 Viewpoint of the traveling twin 9 Difference in elapsed time as a result of differences in twins spacetime paths 10 Difference in elapsed times how to calculate it from the ship 11 A rotational version 12 No twin paradox in an absolute frame of reference 13 See also 14 Primary sources 15 Secondary sources 16 Further reading 17 External linksHistory editFurther information History of special relativity Time dilation and twin paradox In his famous paper on special relativity in 1905 Albert Einstein deduced that when two clocks were brought together and synchronized and then one was moved away and brought back the clock which had undergone the traveling would be found to be lagging behind the clock which had stayed put A 1 Einstein considered this to be a natural consequence of special relativity not a paradox as some suggested and in 1911 he restated and elaborated on this result as follows with physicist Robert Resnick s comments following Einstein s A 2 16 Einstein If we placed a living organism in a box one could arrange that the organism after any arbitrary lengthy flight could be returned to its original spot in a scarcely altered condition while corresponding organisms which had remained in their original positions had already long since given way to new generations For the moving organism the lengthy time of the journey was a mere instant provided the motion took place with approximately the speed of light Resnick If the stationary organism is a man and the traveling one is his twin then the traveler returns home to find his twin brother much aged compared to himself The paradox centers on the contention that in relativity either twin could regard the other as the traveler in which case each should find the other younger a logical contradiction This contention assumes that the twins situations are symmetrical and interchangeable an assumption that is not correct Furthermore the accessible experiments have been done and support Einstein s prediction In 1911 Paul Langevin gave a striking example by describing the story of a traveler making a trip at a Lorentz factor of g 100 99 995 the speed of light The traveler remains in a projectile for one year of his time and then reverses direction Upon return the traveler will find that he has aged two years while 200 years have passed on Earth During the trip both the traveler and Earth keep sending signals to each other at a constant rate which places Langevin s story among the Doppler shift versions of the twin paradox The relativistic effects upon the signal rates are used to account for the different aging rates The asymmetry that occurred because only the traveler underwent acceleration is used to explain why there is any difference at all 17 18 because any change of velocity or any acceleration has an absolute meaning A 3 Max von Laue 1911 1913 elaborated on Langevin s explanation Using Hermann Minkowski s spacetime formalism Laue went on to demonstrate that the world lines of the inertially moving bodies maximize the proper time elapsed between two events He also wrote that the asymmetric aging is completely accounted for by the fact that the astronaut twin travels in two separate frames while the Earth twin remains in one frame and the time of acceleration can be made arbitrarily small compared with the time of inertial motion A 4 A 5 A 6 Eventually Lord Halsbury and others removed any acceleration by introducing the three brother approach The traveling twin transfers his clock reading to a third one traveling in the opposite direction Another way of avoiding acceleration effects is the use of the relativistic Doppler effect see What it looks like the relativistic Doppler shift below Neither Einstein nor Langevin considered such results to be problematic Einstein only called it peculiar while Langevin presented it as a consequence of absolute acceleration A 7 Both men argued that from the time differential illustrated by the story of the twins no self contradiction could be constructed In other words neither Einstein nor Langevin saw the story of the twins as constituting a challenge to the self consistency of relativistic physics Specific example editConsider a space ship traveling from Earth to the nearest star system a distance d 4 light years away at a speed v 0 8c i e 80 of the speed of light To make the numbers easy the ship is assumed to attain full speed in a negligible time upon departure even though it would actually take about 9 months accelerating at 1 g to get up to speed Similarly at the end of the outgoing trip the change in direction needed to start the return trip is assumed to occur in a negligible time This can also be modelled by assuming that the ship is already in motion at the beginning of the experiment and that the return event is modelled by a Dirac delta distribution acceleration 19 The parties will observe the situation as follows 20 21 Earth perspective edit The Earth based mission control reasons about the journey this way the round trip will take t 2d v 10 years in Earth time i e everybody on Earth will be 10 years older when the ship returns The amount of time as measured on the ship s clocks and the aging of the travelers during their trip will be reduced by the factor a 1 v 2 c 2 displaystyle alpha scriptstyle sqrt 1 v 2 c 2 nbsp the reciprocal of the Lorentz factor time dilation In this case a 0 6 and the travelers will have aged only 0 6 10 6 years when they return Travellers perspective edit The ship s crew members also calculate the particulars of their trip from their perspective They know that the distant star system and the Earth are moving relative to the ship at speed v during the trip In their rest frame the distance between the Earth and the star system is a d 0 6 4 2 4 light years length contraction for both the outward and return journeys Each half of the journey takes a d v 2 4 0 8 3 years and the round trip takes twice as long 6 years Their calculations show that they will arrive home having aged 6 years The travelers final calculation about their aging is in complete agreement with the calculations of those on Earth though they experience the trip quite differently from those who stay at home Conclusion edit Readings on Earth s and spaceship s clocks Event Earth years Spaceship years Departure 0 0End of outgoing trip Beginning of ingoing trip 5 3Arrival 10 6No matter what method they use to predict the clock readings everybody will agree about them If twins are born on the day the ship leaves and one goes on the journey while the other stays on Earth they will meet again when the traveler is 6 years old and the stay at home twin is 10 years old Resolution of the paradox in special relativity editThe paradoxical aspect of the twins situation arises from the fact that at any given moment the travelling twin s clock is running slow in the earthbound twin s inertial frame but based on the relativity principle one could equally argue that the earthbound twin s clock is running slow in the travelling twin s inertial frame 22 23 24 One proposed resolution is based on the fact that the earthbound twin is at rest in the same inertial frame throughout the journey while the travelling twin is not in the simplest version of the thought experiment the travelling twin switches at the midpoint of the trip from being at rest in an inertial frame which moves in one direction away from the Earth to being at rest in an inertial frame which moves in the opposite direction towards the Earth In this approach determining which observer switches frames and which does not is crucial Although both twins can legitimately claim that they are at rest in their own frame only the traveling twin experiences acceleration when the spaceship engines are turned on This acceleration measurable with an accelerometer makes his rest frame temporarily non inertial This reveals a crucial asymmetry between the twins perspectives although we can predict the aging difference from both perspectives we need to use different methods to obtain correct results Role of acceleration edit Although some solutions attribute a crucial role to the acceleration of the travelling twin at the time of the turnaround 22 23 24 25 others note that the effect also arises if one imagines two separate travellers one outward going and one inward coming who pass each other and synchronize their clocks at the point corresponding to turnaround of a single traveller In this version physical acceleration of the travelling clock plays no direct role 26 27 19 the issue is how long the world lines are not how bent 28 The length referred to here is the Lorentz invariant length or proper time interval of a trajectory which corresponds to the elapsed time measured by a clock following that trajectory see Section Difference in elapsed time as a result of differences in twins spacetime paths below In Minkowski spacetime the travelling twin must feel a different history of accelerations from the earthbound twin even if this just means accelerations of the same size separated by different amounts of time 28 however even this role for acceleration can be eliminated in formulations of the twin paradox in curved spacetime where the twins can fall freely along space time geodesics between meetings 7 Relativity of simultaneity edit nbsp Minkowski diagram of the twin paradox There is a difference between the trajectories of the twins the trajectory of the ship is equally divided between two different inertial frames while the Earth based twin stays in the same inertial frame For a moment by moment understanding of how the time difference between the twins unfolds one must understand that in special relativity there is no concept of absolute present For different inertial frames there are different sets of events that are simultaneous in that frame This relativity of simultaneity means that switching from one inertial frame to another requires an adjustment in what slice through spacetime counts as the present In the spacetime diagram on the right drawn for the reference frame of the Earth based twin that twin s world line coincides with the vertical axis his position is constant in space moving only in time On the first leg of the trip the second twin moves to the right black sloped line and on the second leg back to the left Blue lines show the planes of simultaneity for the traveling twin during the first leg of the journey red lines during the second leg Just before turnaround the traveling twin calculates the age of the Earth based twin by measuring the interval along the vertical axis from the origin to the upper blue line Just after turnaround if he recalculates he will measure the interval from the origin to the lower red line In a sense during the U turn the plane of simultaneity jumps from blue to red and very quickly sweeps over a large segment of the world line of the Earth based twin When one transfers from the outgoing inertial frame to the incoming inertial frame there is a jump discontinuity in the age of the Earth based twin 22 23 27 29 30 6 4 years in the example above A non space time approach editAs mentioned above an out and back twin paradox adventure may incorporate the transfer of clock reading from an outgoing astronaut to an incoming astronaut thus eliminating the effect of acceleration Also the physical acceleration of clocks does not contribute to the kinematical effects of special relativity Rather in special relativity the time differential between two reunited clocks is produced purely by uniform inertial motion as discussed in Einstein s original 1905 relativity paper 26 as well as in all subsequent kinematical derivations of the Lorentz transformations Because spacetime diagrams incorporate Einstein s clock synchronization with its lattice of clocks methodology there will be a requisite jump in the reading of the Earth clock time made by a suddenly returning astronaut who inherits a new meaning of simultaneity in keeping with a new clock synchronization dictated by the transfer to a different inertial frame as explained in Spacetime Physics by John A Wheeler 29 If instead of incorporating Einstein s clock synchronization lattice of clocks the astronaut outgoing and incoming and the Earth based party regularly update each other on the status of their clocks by way of sending radio signals which travel at light speed then all parties will note an incremental buildup of asymmetry in time keeping beginning at the turn around point Prior to the turn around each party regards the other party s clock to be recording time differently from his own but the noted difference is symmetrical between the two parties After the turn around the noted differences are not symmetrical and the asymmetry grows incrementally until the two parties are reunited Upon finally reuniting this asymmetry can be seen in the actual difference showing on the two reunited clocks 31 The equivalence of biological aging and clock time keeping editAll processes chemical biological measuring apparatus functioning human perception involving the eye and brain the communication of force are constrained by the speed of light There is clock functioning at every level dependent on light speed and the inherent delay at even the atomic level Biological aging therefore is in no way different from clock time keeping 32 This means that biological aging would be slowed in the same manner as a clock What it looks like the relativistic Doppler shift editIn view of the frame dependence of simultaneity for events at different locations in space some treatments prefer a more phenomenological approach describing what the twins would observe if each sent out a series of regular radio pulses equally spaced in time according to the emitter s clock 27 This is equivalent to asking if each twin sent a video feed of themselves to each other what do they see in their screens Or if each twin always carried a clock indicating his age what time would each see in the image of their distant twin and his clock Shortly after departure the traveling twin sees the stay at home twin with no time delay At arrival the image in the ship screen shows the staying twin as he was 1 year after launch because radio emitted from Earth 1 year after launch gets to the other star 4 years afterwards and meets the ship there During this leg of the trip the traveling twin sees his own clock advance 3 years and the clock in the screen advance 1 year so it seems to advance at 1 3 the normal rate just 20 image seconds per ship minute This combines the effects of time dilation due to motion by factor e 0 6 five years on Earth are 3 years on ship and the effect of increasing light time delay which grows from 0 to 4 years Of course the observed frequency of the transmission is also 1 3 the frequency of the transmitter a reduction in frequency red shifted This is called the relativistic Doppler effect The frequency of clock ticks or of wavefronts which one sees from a source with rest frequency frest is f o b s f r e s t 1 v c 1 v c displaystyle f mathrm obs f mathrm rest sqrt left 1 v c right left 1 v c right nbsp when the source is moving directly away This is fobs 1 3 frest for v c 0 8 As for the stay at home twin he gets a slowed signal from the ship for 9 years at a frequency 1 3 the transmitter frequency During these 9 years the clock of the traveling twin in the screen seems to advance 3 years so both twins see the image of their sibling aging at a rate only 1 3 their own rate Expressed in other way they would both see the other s clock run at 1 3 their own clock speed If they factor out of the calculation the fact that the light time delay of the transmission is increasing at a rate of 0 8 seconds per second both can work out that the other twin is aging slower at 60 rate Then the ship turns back toward home The clock of the staying twin shows 1 year after launch in the screen of the ship and during the 3 years of the trip back it increases up to 10 years after launch so the clock in the screen seems to be advancing 3 times faster than usual When the source is moving towards the observer the observed frequency is higher blue shifted and given by f o b s f r e s t 1 v c 1 v c displaystyle f mathrm obs f mathrm rest sqrt left 1 v c right left 1 v c right nbsp This is fobs 3frest for v c 0 8 As for the screen on Earth it shows that trip back beginning 9 years after launch and the traveling clock in the screen shows that 3 years have passed on the ship One year later the ship is back home and the clock shows 6 years So during the trip back both twins see their sibling s clock going 3 times faster than their own Factoring out the fact that the light time delay is decreasing by 0 8 seconds every second each twin calculates that the other twin is aging at 60 his own aging speed nbsp Light paths for images exchanged during tripLeft Earth to ship Right Ship to Earth Red lines indicate low frequency images are received blue lines indicate high frequency images are receivedThe x t space time diagrams at left show the paths of light signals traveling between Earth and ship 1st diagram and between ship and Earth 2nd diagram These signals carry the images of each twin and his age clock to the other twin The vertical black line is the Earth s path through spacetime and the other two sides of the triangle show the ship s path through spacetime as in the Minkowski diagram above As far as the sender is concerned he transmits these at equal intervals say once an hour according to his own clock but according to the clock of the twin receiving these signals they are not being received at equal intervals After the ship has reached its cruising speed of 0 8c each twin would see 1 second pass in the received image of the other twin for every 3 seconds of his own time That is each would see the image of the other s clock going slow not just slow by the e factor 0 6 but even slower because light time delay is increasing 0 8 seconds per second This is shown in the figures by red light paths At some point the images received by each twin change so that each would see 3 seconds pass in the image for every second of his own time That is the received signal has been increased in frequency by the Doppler shift These high frequency images are shown in the figures by blue light paths The asymmetry in the Doppler shifted images edit The asymmetry between the Earth and the space ship is manifested in this diagram by the fact that more blue shifted fast aging images are received by the ship Put another way the space ship sees the image change from a red shift slower aging of the image to a blue shift faster aging of the image at the midpoint of its trip at the turnaround 3 years after departure the Earth sees the image of the ship change from red shift to blue shift after 9 years almost at the end of the period that the ship is absent In the next section one will see another asymmetry in the images the Earth twin sees the ship twin age by the same amount in the red and blue shifted images the ship twin sees the Earth twin age by different amounts in the red and blue shifted images Calculation of elapsed time from the Doppler diagram editThe twin on the ship sees low frequency red images for 3 years During that time he would see the Earth twin in the image grow older by 3 3 1 year He then sees high frequency blue images during the back trip of 3 years During that time he would see the Earth twin in the image grow older by 3 3 9 years When the journey is finished the image of the Earth twin has aged by 1 9 10 years The Earth twin sees 9 years of slow red images of the ship twin during which the ship twin ages in the image by 9 3 3 years He then sees fast blue images for the remaining 1 year until the ship returns In the fast images the ship twin ages by 1 3 3 years The total aging of the ship twin in the images received by Earth is 3 3 6 years so the ship twin returns younger 6 years as opposed to 10 years on Earth The distinction between what they see and what they calculate edit To avoid confusion note the distinction between what each twin sees and what each would calculate Each sees an image of his twin which he knows originated at a previous time and which he knows is Doppler shifted He does not take the elapsed time in the image as the age of his twin now If he wants to calculate when his twin was the age shown in the image i e how old he himself was then he has to determine how far away his twin was when the signal was emitted in other words he has to consider simultaneity for a distant event If he wants to calculate how fast his twin was aging when the image was transmitted he adjusts for the Doppler shift For example when he receives high frequency images showing his twin aging rapidly with frequency f r e s t 1 v c 1 v c displaystyle scriptstyle f mathrm rest sqrt left 1 v c right left 1 v c right nbsp he does not conclude that the twin was aging that rapidly when the image was generated any more than he concludes that the siren of an ambulance is emitting the frequency he hears He knows that the Doppler effect has increased the image frequency by the factor 1 1 v c Therefore he calculates that his twin was aging at the rate off r e s t 1 v c 1 v c 1 v c f r e s t 1 v 2 c 2 ϵ f r e s t displaystyle f mathrm rest sqrt left 1 v c right left 1 v c right times left 1 v c right f mathrm rest sqrt 1 v 2 c 2 equiv epsilon f mathrm rest nbsp when the image was emitted A similar calculation reveals that his twin was aging at the same reduced rate of efrest in all low frequency images Simultaneity in the Doppler shift calculation edit It may be difficult to see where simultaneity came into the Doppler shift calculation and indeed the calculation is often preferred because one does not have to worry about simultaneity As seen above the ship twin can convert his received Doppler shifted rate to a slower rate of the clock of the distant clock for both red and blue images If he ignores simultaneity he might say his twin was aging at the reduced rate throughout the journey and therefore should be younger than he is He is now back to square one and has to take into account the change in his notion of simultaneity at the turnaround The rate he can calculate for the image corrected for Doppler effect is the rate of the Earth twin s clock at the moment it was sent not at the moment it was received Since he receives an unequal number of red and blue shifted images he should realize that the red and blue shifted emissions were not emitted over equal time periods for the Earth twin and therefore he must account for simultaneity at a distance Viewpoint of the traveling twin editDuring the turnaround the traveling twin is in an accelerated reference frame According to the equivalence principle the traveling twin may analyze the turnaround phase as if the stay at home twin were freely falling in a gravitational field and as if the traveling twin were stationary A 1918 paper by Einstein presents a conceptual sketch of the idea A 8 From the viewpoint of the traveler a calculation for each separate leg ignoring the turnaround leads to a result in which the Earth clocks age less than the traveler For example if the Earth clocks age 1 day less on each leg the amount that the Earth clocks will lag behind amounts to 2 days The physical description of what happens at turnaround has to produce a contrary effect of double that amount 4 days advancing of the Earth clocks Then the traveler s clock will end up with a net 2 day delay on the Earth clocks in agreement with calculations done in the frame of the stay at home twin The mechanism for the advancing of the stay at home twin s clock is gravitational time dilation When an observer finds that inertially moving objects are being accelerated with respect to themselves those objects are in a gravitational field insofar as relativity is concerned For the traveling twin at turnaround this gravitational field fills the universe In a weak field approximation clocks tick at a rate of t t 1 F c2 where F is the difference in gravitational potential In this case F gh where g is the acceleration of the traveling observer during turnaround and h is the distance to the stay at home twin The rocket is firing towards the stay at home twin thereby placing that twin at a higher gravitational potential Due to the large distance between the twins the stay at home twin s clocks will appear to be sped up enough to account for the difference in proper times experienced by the twins It is no accident that this speed up is enough to account for the simultaneity shift described above The general relativity solution for a static homogeneous gravitational field and the special relativity solution for finite acceleration produce identical results 33 Other calculations have been done for the traveling twin or for any observer who sometimes accelerates which do not involve the equivalence principle and which do not involve any gravitational fields Such calculations are based only on the special theory not the general theory of relativity One approach calculates surfaces of simultaneity by considering light pulses in accordance with Hermann Bondi s idea of the k calculus 34 A second approach calculates a straightforward but technically complicated integral to determine how the traveling twin measures the elapsed time on the stay at home clock An outline of this second approach is given in a separate section below Difference in elapsed time as a result of differences in twins spacetime paths editFurther information Hyperbolic motion relativity nbsp Twin paradox employing a rocket following an acceleration profile in terms of coordinate time T and by setting c 1 Phase 1 a 0 6 T 2 Phase 2 a 0 T 2 Phase 3 4 a 0 6 2T 4 Phase 5 a 0 T 2 Phase 6 a 0 6 T 2 The twins meet at T 12 and t 9 33 The blue numbers indicate the coordinate time T in the inertial frame of the stay at home twin the red numbers the proper time t of the rocket twin and a is the proper acceleration The thin red lines represent lines of simultaneity in terms of the different momentary inertial frames of the rocket twin The points marked by blue numbers 2 4 8 and 10 indicate the times when the acceleration changes direction The following paragraph shows several things how to employ a precise mathematical approach in calculating the differences in the elapsed time how to prove exactly the dependency of the elapsed time on the different paths taken through spacetime by the twins how to quantify the differences in elapsed time how to calculate proper time as a function integral of coordinate timeLet clock K be associated with the stay at home twin Let clock K be associated with the rocket that makes the trip At the departure event both clocks are set to 0 Phase 1 Rocket with clock K embarks with constant proper acceleration a during a time Ta as measured by clock K until it reaches some velocity V Phase 2 Rocket keeps coasting at velocity V during some time Tc according to clock K Phase 3 Rocket fires its engines in the opposite direction of K during a time Ta according to clock K until it is at rest with respect to clock K The constant proper acceleration has the value a in other words the rocket is decelerating Phase 4 Rocket keeps firing its engines in the opposite direction of K during the same time Ta according to clock K until K regains the same speed V with respect to K but now towards K with velocity V Phase 5 Rocket keeps coasting towards K at speed V during the same time Tc according to clock K Phase 6 Rocket again fires its engines in the direction of K so it decelerates with a constant proper acceleration a during a time Ta still according to clock K until both clocks reunite Knowing that the clock K remains inertial stationary the total accumulated proper time Dt of clock K will be given by the integral function of coordinate time Dt D t 1 v t c 2 d t displaystyle Delta tau int sqrt 1 v t c 2 dt nbsp where v t is the coordinate velocity of clock K as a function of t according to clock K and e g during phase 1 given by v t a t 1 a t c 2 displaystyle v t frac at sqrt 1 left frac at c right 2 nbsp This integral can be calculated for the 6 phases 35 Phase 1 c a arsinh a T a c displaystyle quad c a text arsinh a T a c nbsp Phase 2 T c 1 V 2 c 2 displaystyle quad T c sqrt 1 V 2 c 2 nbsp Phase 3 c a arsinh a T a c displaystyle quad c a text arsinh a T a c nbsp Phase 4 c a arsinh a T a c displaystyle quad c a text arsinh a T a c nbsp Phase 5 T c 1 V 2 c 2 displaystyle quad T c sqrt 1 V 2 c 2 nbsp Phase 6 c a arsinh a T a c displaystyle quad c a text arsinh a T a c nbsp where a is the proper acceleration felt by clock K during the acceleration phase s and where the following relations hold between V a and Ta V a T a 1 a T a c 2 displaystyle V a T a sqrt 1 a T a c 2 nbsp a T a V 1 V 2 c 2 displaystyle a T a V sqrt 1 V 2 c 2 nbsp So the traveling clock K will show an elapsed time of D t 2 T c 1 V 2 c 2 4 c a arsinh a T a c displaystyle Delta tau 2T c sqrt 1 V 2 c 2 4c a text arsinh a T a c nbsp which can be expressed as D t 2 T c 1 a T a c 2 4 c a arsinh a T a c displaystyle Delta tau 2T c sqrt 1 a T a c 2 4c a text arsinh a T a c nbsp whereas the stationary clock K shows an elapsed time of D t 2 T c 4 T a displaystyle Delta t 2T c 4T a nbsp which is for every possible value of a Ta Tc and V larger than the reading of clock K D t gt D t displaystyle Delta t gt Delta tau nbsp Difference in elapsed times how to calculate it from the ship edit nbsp Twin paradox employing a rocket following an acceleration profile in terms of proper time t and by setting c 1 Phase 1 a 0 6 t 2 Phase 2 a 0 t 2 Phase 3 4 a 0 6 2t 4 Phase 5 a 0 t 2 Phase 6 a 0 6 t 2 The twins meet at T 17 3 and t 12 In the standard proper time formula D t 0 D t 1 v t c 2 d t displaystyle Delta tau int 0 Delta t sqrt 1 left frac v t c right 2 dt nbsp Dt represents the time of the non inertial travelling observer K as a function of the elapsed time Dt of the inertial stay at home observer K for whom observer K has velocity v t at time t To calculate the elapsed time Dt of the inertial observer K as a function of the elapsed time Dt of the non inertial observer K where only quantities measured by K are accessible the following formula can be used 19 D t 2 0 D t e 0 t a t d t d t 0 D t e 0 t a t d t d t displaystyle Delta t 2 left int 0 Delta tau e int 0 bar tau a tau d tau d bar tau right left int 0 Delta tau e int 0 bar tau a tau d tau d bar tau right nbsp where a t is the proper acceleration of the non inertial observer K as measured by himself for instance with an accelerometer during the whole round trip The Cauchy Schwarz inequality can be used to show that the inequality Dt gt Dt follows from the previous expression D t 2 0 D t e 0 t a t d t d t 0 D t e 0 t a t d t d t gt 0 D t e 0 t a t d t e 0 t a t d t d t 2 0 D t d t 2 D t 2 displaystyle begin aligned Delta t 2 amp left int 0 Delta tau e int 0 bar tau a tau d tau d bar tau right left int 0 Delta tau e int 0 bar tau a tau d tau d bar tau right amp gt left int 0 Delta tau e int 0 bar tau a tau d tau e int 0 bar tau a tau d tau d bar tau right 2 left int 0 Delta tau d bar tau right 2 Delta tau 2 end aligned nbsp Using the Dirac delta function to model the infinite acceleration phase in the standard case of the traveller having constant speed v during the outbound and the inbound trip the formula produces the known result D t 1 1 v 2 c 2 D t displaystyle Delta t frac 1 sqrt 1 tfrac v 2 c 2 Delta tau nbsp In the case where the accelerated observer K departs from K with zero initial velocity the general equation reduces to the simpler form D t 0 D t e 0 t a t d t d t displaystyle Delta t int 0 Delta tau e pm int 0 bar tau a tau d tau d bar tau nbsp which in the smooth version of the twin paradox where the traveller has constant proper acceleration phases successively given by a a a a results in 19 D t 4 a sinh a 4 D t displaystyle Delta t tfrac 4 a sinh tfrac a 4 Delta tau nbsp where the convention c 1 is used in accordance with the above expression with acceleration phases Ta Dt 4 and inertial coasting phases Tc 0 A rotational version editTwins Bob and Alice inhabit a space station in circular orbit around a massive body in space Bob suits up and exits the station While Alice remains inside the station continuing to orbit with it as before Bob uses a rocket propulsion system to cease orbiting and hover where he was When the station completes an orbit and returns to Bob he rejoins Alice Alice is now younger than Bob 36 In addition to rotational acceleration Bob must decelerate to become stationary and then accelerate again to match the orbital speed of the space station No twin paradox in an absolute frame of reference editEinstein s conclusion of an actual difference in registered clock times or aging between reunited parties caused Paul Langevin to posit an actual albeit experimentally indiscernible absolute frame of reference In 1911 Langevin wrote A uniform translation in the aether has no experimental sense But because of this it should not be concluded as has sometimes happened prematurely that the concept of aether must be abandoned that the aether is non existent and inaccessible to experiment Only a uniform velocity relative to it cannot be detected but any change of velocity has an absolute sense 37 In 1913 Henri Poincare s posthumous Last Essays were published and there he had restated his position Today some physicists want to adopt a new convention It is not that they are constrained to do so they consider this new convention more convenient that is all And those who are not of this opinion can legitimately retain the old one 38 In the relativity of Poincare and Hendrik Lorentz which assumes an absolute though experimentally indiscernible frame of reference no paradox arises due to the fact that clock slowing along with length contraction and velocity is regarded as an actuality hence the actual time differential between the reunited clocks In that interpretation a party at rest with the totality of the cosmos at rest with the barycenter of the universe or at rest with a possible ether would have the maximum rate of time keeping and have non contracted length All the effects of Einstein s special relativity consistent light speed measure as well as symmetrically measured clock slowing and length contraction across inertial frames fall into place That interpretation of relativity which John A Wheeler calls ether theory B length contraction plus time contraction did not gain as much traction as Einstein s which simply disregarded any deeper reality behind the symmetrical measurements across inertial frames There is no physical test which distinguishes one interpretation from the other 39 In 2005 Robert B Laughlin Physics Nobel Laureate Stanford University wrote about the nature of space It is ironic that Einstein s most creative work the general theory of relativity should boil down to conceptualizing space as a medium when his original premise in special relativity was that no such medium existed The word ether has extremely negative connotations in theoretical physics because of its past association with opposition to relativity This is unfortunate because stripped of these connotations it rather nicely captures the way most physicists actually think about the vacuum Relativity actually says nothing about the existence or nonexistence of matter pervading the universe only that any such matter must have relativistic symmetry i e as measured 40 In Special Relativity 1968 A P French wrote Note though that we are appealing to the reality of A s acceleration and to the observability of the inertial forces associated with it Would such effects as the twin paradox specifically the time keeping differential between reunited clocks exist if the framework of fixed stars and distant galaxies were not there Most physicists would say no Our ultimate definition of an inertial frame may indeed be that it is a frame having zero acceleration with respect to the matter of the universe at large 41 See also editBell s spaceship paradox Clock hypothesis Ehrenfest paradox Herbert Dingle Ladder paradox List of paradoxes Supplee s paradox Time dilation Time for the StarsPrimary sources edit Einstein Albert 1905 On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies Annalen der Physik 17 10 891 end of 4 Bibcode 1905AnP 322 891E doi 10 1002 andp 19053221004 Einstein Albert 1911 Die Relativitats Theorie Naturforschende Gesellschaft Zurich Vierteljahresschrift 56 1 14 Langevin P 1911 The evolution of space and time Scientia X 31 54 translated by J B Sykes 1973 from the original French L evolution de l espace et du temps von Laue Max 1911 Zwei Einwande gegen die Relativitatstheorie und ihre Widerlegung Two Objections Against the Theory of Relativity and their Refutation Physikalische Zeitschrift 13 118 120 von Laue Max 1913 Das Relativitatsprinzip The Principle of Relativity 2 ed Braunschweig Germany Friedrich Vieweg OCLC 298055497 von Laue Max 1913 Das Relativitatsprinzip The Principle of Relativity Jahrbucher der Philosophie 1 99 128 We are going to see this absolute character of the acceleration manifest itself in another form Nous allons voir se manifester sous une autre forme ce caractere absolu de l acceleration page 82 of Langevin1911 Einstein A 1918 dialog about objections against the theory of relativity Die Naturwissenschaften 48 pp 697 702 29 November 1918Secondary sources edit Crowell Benjamin 2000 The Modern Revolution in Physics illustrated ed Light and Matter p 23 ISBN 978 0 9704670 6 5 Extract of page 23 Serway Raymond A Moses Clement J Moyer Curt A 2004 Modern Physics 3rd ed Cengage Learning p 21 ISBN 978 1 111 79437 8 Extract of page 21 D Auria Riccardo Trigiante Mario 2011 From Special Relativity to Feynman Diagrams A Course of Theoretical Particle Physics for Beginners illustrated ed Springer Science amp Business Media p 541 ISBN 978 88 470 1504 3 Extract of page 541 Ohanian Hans C Ruffini Remo 2013 Gravitation and Spacetime 3rd ed Cambridge University Press p 176 ISBN 978 1 139 61954 7 Extract of page 176 Hawley John F Holcomb Katherine A 2005 Foundations of Modern Cosmology illustrated ed Oxford University Press p 203 ISBN 978 0 19 853096 1 Extract of page 203 P Mohazzabi Q Luo J of Applied Mathematics and Physics 2021 9 2187 2192 a b Debs Talal A Redhead Michael L G 1996 The twin paradox and the conventionality of simultaneity American Journal of Physics 64 4 384 392 Bibcode 1996AmJPh 64 384D doi 10 1119 1 18252 Miller Arthur I 1981 Albert Einstein s special theory of relativity Emergence 1905 and early interpretation 1905 1911 Reading Addison Wesley pp 257 264 ISBN 0 201 04679 2 Max Jammer 2006 Concepts of Simultaneity From Antiquity to Einstein and Beyond The Johns Hopkins University Press p 165 ISBN 0 8018 8422 5 Schutz Bernard 2003 Gravity from the Ground Up An Introductory Guide to Gravity and General Relativity illustrated ed Cambridge University Press p 207 ISBN 978 0 521 45506 0 Extract of page 207 Baez John 1996 Can Special Relativity Handle Acceleration Retrieved 30 May 2017 How does relativity theory resolve the Twin Paradox Scientific American David Halliday et al The Fundamentals of Physics John Wiley and Sons 1996 Paul Davies About Time Touchstone 1995 ppf 59 John Simonetti Frequently Asked Questions About Special Relativity The Twin Paradox Virginia Tech Physics Retrieved 25 May 2020 Resnick Robert 1968 Supplementary Topic B The Twin Paradox Introduction to Special Relativity place New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 201 ISBN 0 471 71725 8 LCCN 67031211 via August Kopff Hyman Levy translator The Mathematical Theory of Relativity London Methuen amp Co Ltd 1923 p 52 as quoted by G J Whitrow The Natural Philosophy of Time New York Harper Torchbooks 1961 p 215 J B Kennedy 2014 Space Time and Einstein An Introduction revised ed Routledge p 39 ISBN 978 1 317 48944 3 Extract of page 39 Richard A Mould 2001 Basic Relativity illustrated herdruk ed Springer Science amp Business Media p 39 ISBN 978 0 387 95210 9 Extract of page 39 a b c d E Minguzzi 2005 Differential aging from acceleration An explicit formula Am J Phys 73 876 880 arXiv physics 0411233 Notation of source variables was adapted to match this article s Jain Mahesh C 2009 Textbook Of Engineering Physics Part I PHI Learning Pvt p 74 ISBN 978 8120338623 Extract of page 74 Sardesai P L 2004 Introduction to Relativity New Age International pp 27 28 ISBN 8122415202 Extract of page 27 a b c Ohanian Hans 2001 Special relativity a modern introduction Lakeville MN Physics Curriculum and Instruction ISBN 0971313415 a b c Harris Randy 2008 Modern Physics San Francisco CA Pearson Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0805303087 a b Rindler W 2006 Introduction to special relativity Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198567318 Weidner Richard 1985 Physics Needham Heights MA Allyn and Bacon ISBN 0205111556 a b Einstein A Lorentz H A Minkowski H and Weyl H 1923 Arnold Sommerfeld ed The Principle of Relativity Dover Publications Mineola NY pp 38 49 a b c Kogut John B 2012 Introduction to Relativity For Physicists and Astronomers Academic Press p 35 ISBN 978 0 08 092408 3 Extract of page 35 a b Maudlin Tim 2012 Philosophy of physics space and time Princeton Princeton University Press pp 77 83 ISBN 9780691143095 a b Wheeler J Taylor E 1992 Spacetime Physics second edition W H Freeman New York pp 38 170 171 Einstein A Lorentz H A Minkowski H and Weyl H 1923 Arnold Sommerfeld ed The Principle of Relativity Dover Publications Mineola NY p 38 William Geraint Vaughan Rosser 1991 Introductory Special Relativity Taylor amp Francis Inc USA pp 67 68 Taylor Edwin F Wheeler John Archibald 1992 Spacetime Physics 2nd illustrated ed W H Freeman p 150 ISBN 978 0 7167 2327 1 Jones Preston Wanex L F February 2006 The clock paradox in a static homogeneous gravitational field Foundations of Physics Letters 19 1 75 85 arXiv physics 0604025 Bibcode 2006FoPhL 19 75J doi 10 1007 s10702 006 1850 3 S2CID 14583590 Dolby Carl E amp Gull Stephen F 2001 On Radar Time and the Twin Paradox American Journal of Physics 69 12 1257 1261 arXiv gr qc 0104077 Bibcode 2001AmJPh 69 1257D doi 10 1119 1 1407254 S2CID 119067219 C Lagoute and E Davoust 1995 The interstellar traveler Am J Phys 63 221 227 Michael Paul Hobson George Efstathiou Anthony N Lasenby 2006 General Relativity An Introduction for Physicists Cambridge University Press p 227 ISBN 0 521 82951 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link See exercise 9 25 on page 227 Langevin P 1911 The evolution of space and time Scientia X p 47 translated by J B Sykes 1973 Poincare Henri 1913 Mathematics and science last essays Dernieres pensees Wheeler J Taylor E 1992 Spacetime Physics second edition W H Freeman New York p 88 Laughlin Robert B 2005 A Different Universe Reinventing Physics from the Bottom Down Basic Books NY NY pp 120 121 French A P 1968 Special Relativity W W Norton New York p 156 Further reading editThe ideal clockThe ideal clock is a clock whose action depends only on its instantaneous velocity and is independent of any acceleration of the clock Wolfgang Rindler 2006 Time dilation Relativity Special General and Cosmological Oxford University Press p 43 ISBN 0 19 856731 6 Gravitational time dilation time dilation in circular motionJohn A Peacock 2001 Cosmological Physics Cambridge University Press p 8 ISBN 0 521 42270 1 Silvio Bonometto Vittorio Gorini Ugo Moschella 2002 Modern Cosmology CRC Press p 12 ISBN 0 7503 0810 9 Patrick Cornille 2003 Advanced Electromagnetism and Vacuum Physics World Scientific p 180 ISBN 981 238 367 0 External links edit nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Special relativity nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Twin paradox Twin Paradox overview Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine in the Usenet Physics FAQ The twin paradox Is the symmetry of time dilation paradoxical From Einsteinlight Relativity in animations and film clips FLASH Animations from John de Pillis Scene 1 View from the Earth twin s point of view Scene 2 View from the traveling twin s point of view Relativity Science Calculator Twin Clock Paradox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Twin paradox amp oldid 1189721361, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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