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Time Dilation

  
Figure: A ``light clock" is constructed aboard a glass spaceship (reference frame O') as follows: the ``tick" of the clock is defined by one half the time interval t' required for the light from a strobe light to traverse the width of the ship (a height h), bounce off a mirror and come back, a total distance of 2h. In the reference frame of a ground-based observer O (with respect to whom the ship is travelling at a velocity u), the light is emitted a distance 2ut behind the place where it is detected a time 2t later. Since the light has further to go in the O frame (a distance ), but it travels at c in both frames, t must be longer than t'. This effect is known as time dilation.

Fig. gif pictures a device used by R.P. Feynman, among others, to illustrate the phenomenon of time dilation: a clock aboard a fast-moving vessel (even a normal clock) appears gif to run slower when observed from the ``rest frame" -- the name we give to the reference frame arbitrarily chosen to be at rest. Now, if we choose to regard the ship's frame as ``at rest" (as is the wont of those aboard) and the Earth as ``moving," a clock on Earth will appear to be running slowly when observed from the ship! Who is right? The correct answer is ``both," in utter disregard for common sense. This seems to create a logical paradox, which we will discuss momentarily. But first let's go beyond the qualitative statement, ``The clock runs slower," and ask how much slower.

For this we need only a little algebra and geometry; nevertheless, the derivation is perilous, so watch carefully. For O', the time interval described in Fig. gif is simply

whereas for O the time interval is given by

by the Pythagorean theorem. Expanding the latter equation gives

which is not a solution yet because it does not relate t to t'. We need to ``plug in" h2 = c2 t'2 from earlier, to get

where we have recalled the definition . In one last step we obtain

where is defined as before: .

This derivation is a little crude, but it shows where comes from.





next up previous
Next: The Twin Paradox Up: No Title Previous: Simultaneous for Whom?



Jess Brewer
Fri Aug 16 17:01:55 PDT 1996