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  • The setup for the twins paradox is as followssuppose I sit on earth while you head

  • off on a rocketship at a constant speed for a while, then turn around and come back.

  • We know that moving things experience time more slowly, so I'll think that when you get

  • back, you should be younger than me.

  • But from your perspective, the earth (with me on it) is doing the moving, receding and

  • then returning, so you think that I should be younger than you.

  • Who's right?

  • We'll use the fact that time rotates to sort this all out.

  • Ok, so from my perspective, every second that passes I stay in the same place, while every

  • second that passes, you get farther away, and then closer.

  • Simple enough.

  • From my perspective, you'll take ten seconds to get back.

  • And since you're moving, I'll think that time is passing more slowly for you, so I'll calculate

  • that your journey, for you, takes eight seconds.

  • Nowand this is the important bitsince you're moving, what you think of as the forward

  • direction of time will be rotated relative to _my_ perception of time.

  • So on your outward journey, the seconds will tick away like this.

  • And on your return journey, the seconds will look like this.

  • From your perspective, your journey does indeed take eight seconds!

  • But almost immediately, we also see the solution to the twins paradox: right here.

  • This bit of my time is unaccounted for by you.

  • During your entire journey, you'll think that time is passing more slowly for me than for

  • you (and indeed it ishere, and here, add up to only 6.4 seconds), but because of

  • your change in velocity when you turn around to come home, your notion of time rotates

  • and skips right over a large swath of my time.

  • Which amounts to preciselyyou guessed itthe missing 3.6 seconds.

  • And this is the resolution to the twins paradox: because you changed velocity, your notion

  • of simultaneous times rotates, so your accounting of how time passes in parts of the universe

  • far away from you will have gaps in it.

  • Well, in reality it wouldn't have gaps, because you couldn't instantaneously change direction

  • you'd have to fire your rockets to start heading home, and during that acceleration

  • your notion of time would have very very quickly rotated through the missing gap in my journey,

  • allowing you to properly account for the missing time.

  • In summary: during your outward and return journeys, ten seconds would pass for me, and

  • I'd calculate eight seconds as passing for you.

  • Eight seconds _would_ pass for you, and you'd calculate 6.4 seconds as passing for me during

  • your outward and return journeys, and 3.6 seconds as passing for me during your acceleration

  • (even if it was basically instantaneous).

  • So we both agree that when you come home, you'll be younger!

  • And indeed, this is what happens when you send an atomic clock flying around in in an

  • airplane: it records less time as having passed than a twin atomic clock that stays on the

  • ground.

  • PS the time rotations I've been talking about are actually called "Lorentz Transformations",

  • and they're the way that most working physicists think about special relativity and things

  • like time dilation, relativistic doppler shifts, and so on.

  • Trying to understand relativity just by using basic equations for time dilation and length

  • contraction (like is often done in beginning physics classes) will often lead to confusing

  • apparent contradictions, because they don't take into account the full changing of simultaneity

  • of events, and so on.

The setup for the twins paradox is as followssuppose I sit on earth while you head

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双子のパラドックスの完全な解決策 (Complete Solution To The Twins Paradox)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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