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I started this series saying that relativity is about understanding how things look from
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different perspectives, and in particular, understanding what does and doesn't look different
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from different perspectives.
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And at this point you'd be justified to feel like we've kind of just trashed a bunch of
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the foundational concepts of physical reality: we've shown how our perceptions of lengths
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and spatial distances, time intervals, the notion of simultaneous events, and so on,
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are not absolute: they're different when viewed from different moving perspectives, and so
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aren't universal truths.
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And if we can't agree on the length of something, what can we agree on?
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Anyway, the point is, this relativity thing so far kind of just feels like it's leaving
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us hanging.
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I mean, all we've really got is the fact that the speed of light in a vacuum is constant
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from all perspectives – which, while it's true, doesn't feel nearly as helpful in describing
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objects and events the way that lengths and times are.
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Luckily, there is a version of length and time intervals that's the same from all moving
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perspectives, the way the speed of light is.
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You know how if you have a stick that's 10 meters long and you rotate it slightly and
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measure its length, it won't be 10 meters long in the x direction any more - it'll be
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shorter?
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Now, if you know some math you'll tell me it's not actually shorter, and you can still
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calculate its true length using the pythagorean theorem as the square root of its horizontal
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length squared plus its vertical length squared.
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And yes, this is the case.
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You can use the pythagorean theorem to calculate the true length of the stick regardless of
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how it's rotated.
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But you don't need to use the pythagorean theorem at all - if you just rotate the stick
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back so that it's a hundred percent lying in the x direction, then you just measure
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it as 10 meters long and that's that.
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No pythagorean theorem necessary.
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In some sense, this is what gives us justification to use the pythagorean theorem to calculate
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the length of rotated things – sure, it's important that the pythagorean theorem always
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gives the same answer regardless of the rotation, but it's critical that it agrees with the
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actual length we measure when the object isn't rotated.
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And it turns out there's a version of the pythagorean theorem for lengths and times
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in spacetime that allows us to measure the true lengths and durations of things - the
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lengths and durations they have when they're not rotated.
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Except, as you know from Lorentz transformations, rotations of spacetime correspond to changes
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between moving perspectives, so true length and true duration in spacetime correspond
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to the length and duration measured when the object in question isn't moving - that is,
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true length and true time are those measured from the perspective of the object in question.
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For example, suppose I'm not moving and I have a lightbulb with me which I turn off
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after four seconds.
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As we know, any perspective moving relative to me will say I left my lightbulb on for
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more than four seconds – like, you, moving a third the speed of light to my left, will
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say I left it on for 4.24 seconds – that's time dilation.
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However, this is where the spacetime pythagorean theorem comes in – it's like the regular
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pythagorean theorem, but where instead of taking the square root of the sum of the squares
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of the space and time intervals, you take the square root of their difference (\sqrt{\Delta
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t^{2}-\Delta x^{2}}).
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Now we need a quick aside here to talk about how to add and subtract space and time intervals
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from each other – I mean, one is in meters and the other seconds, so at first it seems
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impossible to compare them to each other.
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But in our daily lives we directly compare distances and times all the time – we say
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that the grocery store is five minutes away, even though what we actually mean is that
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it's 1 km away; it just takes us 5 minutes to bike 1 km, so we use that speed to convert
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distance to time.
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In special relativity, however, we convert not with bike speed but with light speed - that
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is, how long it would take light to go a given distance.
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For example, light goes roughly 300 million meters in one second, so a light-second is
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a way to compare one second of time with one meter (and second is WAAAAAAY bigger!).
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So, back in our example situation, where from my not-moving perspective I had my lightbulb
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on for 4 seconds - from your perspective it was on for 4.24 seconds before I turned it
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off, in which time I had traveled 1.4 light-seconds to your right.
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And the spacetime version of the pythagorean theorem simply tells you to square the time,
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subtract the square of the distance (measured using light-seconds), and take the square
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root of the whole thing.
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Voilá - 4 seconds!
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We used observations from your perspective to successfully calculate the true duration
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I had my light on - the duration that I, not moving, experienced.
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And it works for any moving reference frame.
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Here, from a perspective in which I'm moving 60\% the speed of light to the right, I left
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my lightbulb on for 5 seconds, during which time I moved 3 light seconds to the right.
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Square the time, subtract the distance squared, take the square root, and again, we've got
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4 seconds: the true, proper duration of time for which my lightbulb was on.
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This all works similarly for true, proper lengths, too: here are two boxes that spontaneously
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combust 1200 million meters apart – at least, it's 1200 million meters from my perspective,
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in which the boxes aren't moving.
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From your perspective, in which the boxes and I are moving a third the speed of light
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to the right, the distance between the combusting boxes is now 1273 million meters, and the
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time between when they spontaneously combust is now 1.41 seconds, which converts, using
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the speed of light, to 425 million meters.
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We're again ready for the spacetime pythagorean theorem: square the distance, subtract the
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square of the time (measured in light-meters), and take the square root of the whole thing
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to get... you guessed it, 1200 million meters.
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Specifically, what we just did was use Lorentz-transformed observations from your perspective to calculate
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the true distance between the boxes from their (and my) perspective.
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And it would work from any other moving perspective, too.
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The bottom line is that in special relativity, while distances and time intervals are different
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from different perspectives, there is still an absolute sense of the true length and true
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duration of things that's the same from everyone's perspective: anyone can take the distances
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and times as measured from their perspective and use the spacetime pythagorean theorem
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to calculate the distance and time experienced by the thing whose distance or time you're
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talking about.
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Perhaps it should be called “egalitarian distance” and “egalitarian time”.
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But sadly no, these true distances and times are typically called “proper length” and
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“proper time”.
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And the spacetime pythagorean theorem, because it combines intervals in space and time together,
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has the incredibly creative name “spacetime interval”.
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But don't let that get you down: spacetime intervals allow us to be self-centered and
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lazy!
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Spacetime intervals allow fast-moving people to understand what life is like from our own,
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non-moving perspectives.
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The astute among you may have noticed that there was some funny business going on regarding
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whether or not we subtracted distance from time or time from distance - the short story
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is that it just depends on whether you're dealing with a proper length or a proper time.
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The long story is an age-old debate about what's called “the signature of the metric”.
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And if you want practice using proper time and spacetime intervals to understand real-world
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problems, I highly recommend Brilliant.org's course on special relativity.
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There, you can apply the ideas from this video to scenarios in the natural world where special
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relativity really affects outcomes, like the apparently paradoxical survival of cosmic
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ray muons streaming through Earth's atmosphere.
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The special relativity questions on Brilliant.org are specifically designed to help you go deeper
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on the topics I'm including in this series, and you can get 20% off of a Brilliant subscription
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by going to Brilliant.org/minutephysics.
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Again, that's Brilliant.org/minutephysics which gets you 20% off premium access to all
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of Brilliant's courses and puzzles, and lets Brilliant know you came from here.