This Paradox Took 17 Years To Solve. It's Still Debated.

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Bell's spaceship paradox from special relativity has been tormenting physicists for decades. I try to settle the debate once and for all with the use of spacetime diagrams.
00:00 Cold Open
00:57 Physical Paradoxes
01:42 History of Spaceship Paradox
02:41 Spaceship Paradox Explained
04:59 Acceleration in Special Relativity
06:55 The Solution
08:36 The Limits
09:48 Sponsor Message
10:54 Outro
11:13 Featured Comment
Nick Lucid - Host/Writer/Editor/Animator
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VIDEO ANNOTATIONS/CARDS
Quantum Entanglement:
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Light is Infinite:
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Length Contraction Explained:
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RELATED KZread VIDEOS
Kyle Hill on Spaceship Paradox:
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Epic Math Time on Spaceship Paradox:
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MinutePhysics on Spaceship Paradox:
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Пікірлер: 3 700

  • @ScienceAsylum
    @ScienceAsylum Жыл бұрын

    The first 1,000 people to use the link will get a 1 month free trial of Skillshare: skl.sh/thescienceasylum07221

  • @huepix

    @huepix

    Жыл бұрын

    Free? They want my credit card!

  • @Secret_Moon

    @Secret_Moon

    Жыл бұрын

    Could the reason that we see the universe expanding is because our galaxy and other far away galaxies are moving at the speed of light? What what what?

  • @nikhilsrivastava1931

    @nikhilsrivastava1931

    Жыл бұрын

    make a video on ALCUBIERRE DRIVE

  • @ready1fire1aim1

    @ready1fire1aim1

    Жыл бұрын

    As Leibniz put it: “If an ontological theory implies the existence of two scenarios that are empirically indistinguishable in principle but ontologically distinct ... then the ontological theory should be rejected and replaced with one relative to which the two scenarios are ontologically identical.” In other words, if a theory describes two situations as being distinct, and yet also implies that there is no conceivable way, empirically, to tell them apart, then that theory contains some superfluous and arbitrary elements that ought to be removed. Leibniz’s prescription is, of course, widely accepted by most physicists today. The idea exerted a powerful influence over later thinkers, including Poincaré and Einstein, and helped lead to the theories of special and general relativity. And this idea, Spekkens suggests, may still hold further value for questions at the frontiers of today’s physics. Leibniz’s correspondent Clarke objected to his view, suggesting an exception. A man riding inside a boat, he argued, may not detect its motion, yet that motion is obviously real enough. Leibniz countered that such motion is real because it can be detected by someone, even if it isn’t actually detected in some particular case. “Motion does not indeed depend upon being observed,” he wrote, “but it does depend upon being possible to be observed ... when there is no change that can be observed, there is no change at all.” In this, Leibniz was arguing against prevailing ideas of the time, and against Newton, who conceived of space and time in absolute terms. “I have said more than once,” Leibniz wrote, “that I hold space to be something merely relative.” Einstein, of course, followed Leibniz’s principle when he noticed that the equations of electricity and magnetism make no reference to any absolute sense of motion, but only to relative motion. A conducting wire moving through the field of a magnet seems like a distinct situation from a magnet moving past a stationary wire. Yet the two situations are in fact empirically identical, and should, Einstein concluded, be considered as such. Demanding as much leads to the Lorentz transformation as the proper way to link descriptions in reference frames in relative motion. From this, one finds a host of highly counter-intuitive effects, including time dilation. Einstein again followed Leibniz on his way to general relativity. In this case, the indistinguishability of two distinct situations - a body at rest in the absence of a gravitational field, or in free fall within a field - implied the impossibility of referring to any concept of absolute acceleration. In a 1922 lecture, Einstein recalled the moment of his discovery: “The breakthrough came suddenly one day. I was sitting on a chair in my patent office in Bern. Suddenly the thought struck me: If a man falls freely, he would not feel his own weight. I was taken aback. This simple thought experiment made a deep impression on me. This led me to the theory of gravity.”

  • @olmostgudinaf8100

    @olmostgudinaf8100

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Secret_Moon We *are* moving at the speed of light. It's the universal constant. Everything moves at that speed through a four-dimensional space-time. It's just that objects with mass are moving mostly in the time direction. In the extreme case, they only move through time, whilst staying stationary in space. Objects without mass (such as photons) move only through space, whilst staying stationary in time. Relativistic effects that make it _appear_ that time is slowing down are caused by changing the _direction_ of the movement, not the speed.

  • @BillDeWitt
    @BillDeWitt Жыл бұрын

    My initial thought was that the whole setup, both rockets and the string, are one unit, and it all shrinks as a unit. So the length from the tip of one rocket to the tail of the other looks shorter from a stationary observer.

  • @olmostgudinaf8100

    @olmostgudinaf8100

    Жыл бұрын

    Damn, I just posted the same thing! I should read other comments first 😇

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    The ships have their own thrust and the string is too weak to affect anything, so they act independently. They can't be one object.

  • @BillDeWitt

    @BillDeWitt

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum ok, well, at exactly what thickness does a string go from being a string and turn into a solid connection? Not trying to be pissy, I just wonder. Maybe when the string is stiff enough for the rear ship to be able to apply a little push to the front one? How about a bazillion strings where each one is floppity-floppity but together they are too strong to break?

  • @olmostgudinaf8100

    @olmostgudinaf8100

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BillDeWitt Until someone brings a _very_ strong argument to convince me otherwise, I would say that the thickness is zero. In other words, even a formation of ships with nothing but empty space between them should be treated as a unit, if it behaves like one.

  • @Jim-uq1mc

    @Jim-uq1mc

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum Not sure whether this holds true. The configuration space ship #1 + string + space ship #2 should be considered as ONE object. This object shrinks along with the space inbetween. There is no need to have any forces acting . . .

  • @emilio.occhipinti
    @emilio.occhipinti Жыл бұрын

    1. Why two ships and a string are not considered as a single entity? 2. Isn't the string accelerating too, contracting, and pulling the ships together? 3. What would happen if a somewhat long spaceship had two propellers one in front of the other?

  • @swagdog100

    @swagdog100

    Жыл бұрын

    I want to know too

  • @lokeshkalamalla

    @lokeshkalamalla

    Жыл бұрын

    exactly my doubts

  • @brothermine2292

    @brothermine2292

    Жыл бұрын

    Nick discussed this scenario near the end, where the weak string is replaced by a stronger string or a rigid rod.

  • @Frankly7

    @Frankly7

    Жыл бұрын

    The answer to all three of your questions comes down to how strong the connecting material is. If it's strong enough to pull everything together, it's one entity. If not, it's multiple entities.

  • @lamcho00

    @lamcho00

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Frankly7 well, technically it's always multiple entities on the atomic scale. The question is whether the electromagnetic bonds are strong enough to withstand the acceleration and not break the object apart. If the bonds are strong enough then the acceleration is propagated to the rest of the object, if not the object breaks and flies apart.

  • @ScottLahteine
    @ScottLahteine Жыл бұрын

    I get the feeling Veritasium, ElectroBOOM, ActionLab, Steve Mould, Sabine Hossenfelder, and Don Lincoln are all going to need to post followups to this one! Everyone wants to know why the space between the ships isn't contracting in the *essentially shared frame of reference* that the two ships occupy.

  • @wulf2121

    @wulf2121

    Жыл бұрын

    The frame of reference is only shared at the beginning, but as soon as they start accelerating, it's not longer shared. It's because from the point of view of a ship already moving (the MCIF mentioned in the middle) what happens in front happens earlier, so the ship in front actually must already have accelerated more than the one behind (it had more time to do so). So you get 2 ships moving at different speed - so different frames of reference. Now if you stitch the multiple MCIF together to see what that looks like from an accelarating observer, you get exactly the result as the video says (from the ship behind, the ship in front appears to accelerate too fast, from the ship in front, the one behind appears to accelerate too slowly). Also, minutephysics already has a video presenting this topic with the same conclusion.

  • @ShionWinkler

    @ShionWinkler

    Жыл бұрын

    The ships aren't contracting and nether is the space, it is an "illusion" created by relativity. The truth is the two ships don't, and can't, accelerate at the same rate, space-time just won't allow it. Also this is a bit misleading, yes the two ships will start to move apart, but at such a slow rate at first that the string won't snap. The two ships will need to travel for a very long time, or accelerate rapidly to relativistic speeds before the gap would grow large enough to snap the string. At speeds we can relate too, like maybe mach 5, the gap would increases at a rate of like 1 atom every year.

  • @gauravagrawal9265

    @gauravagrawal9265

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ShionWinkler why they can't accelerate at same rate?

  • @robertcairone3619

    @robertcairone3619

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ShionWinkler Why won't space-time allow it? What makes space-time forbid it?

  • @AnthonyFlack

    @AnthonyFlack

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gauravagrawal9265 - Whether they are moving at the same rate or not depends on the observer. If they move at the same rate according to A and B, the rates will be different according to C. And vice versa.

  • @robjames4160
    @robjames4160 Жыл бұрын

    Length contraction is evident from the 3rd party observer, but it's not the length of the ships that contract, it's the apparent lengths of the ships relative to the OBSERVER'S frame of reference due to what light is doing during the ships' acceleration. The 3rd party observer is not seeing anything specific happen to the ships themselves, only to the light being emitted or reflected by them. The ships don't actually change in length relative to the space in their own refrence frame. Therefore, the string doesn't break because it too is accelerating at the same rate as the ships themselves, and its not the string that is contracting, only the appearance of the string that is contracting. The two ships and the string occupy the same inertial frame of reference and are ALWAYS the same object, regardless of the strength of the string. The appearance of BOTH ships AND the string will contract in unison to the 3rd party observer.

  • @TheMonk72

    @TheMonk72

    Жыл бұрын

    That was my immediate thought. People mistake length contraction as a physical change in the relativistic object. It's really not.

  • @TheMonk72

    @TheMonk72

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kylelochlann5053 why do the ships move further apart? If they're accelerating at precisely the same rate their instantaneous reference frame will remain consistent. In those frames they will not experience any length contraction either of themselves or the other entities in that frame. The rotating spacial co-ordinate is a way to translate between inertial reference frames isn't it?

  • @TheMonk72

    @TheMonk72

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kylelochlann5053 if acceleration is the same then instantaneous velocity is the same and distance travelled is the same. Whatever offset they had at the start is the same at all points along the curve. If length contraction is an effect that objects experience physically at relativistic speeds then that implies a universal inertial reference frame... which GR expressly forbids.

  • @darkracer1252

    @darkracer1252

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kylelochlann5053 the ships do not move further appart. stop being braindead

  • @charleslivingston2256

    @charleslivingston2256

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheMonk72- The acceleration is only the same in Charles's reference frame. I'm the reference frame of each of the spaceships, the start happens at slightly different times.

  • @n4whhdb
    @n4whhdb Жыл бұрын

    It's so refreshing to see the graphs and animations specific to what you are explaining. I know it takes a lot longer to produce an episode but it is totally worth it. So many people just use public domain looped graphics that become rather tiresome to watch after a while. Keep up the good work, it's outstanding!

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Yes, they're a lot of work. It's nice to know that work is appreciated 🙂

  • @pinocleen

    @pinocleen

    Жыл бұрын

    He's got his twin to help... :P

  • @kkarlsen_06

    @kkarlsen_06

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum I agree so much! Keep it up, it's awesome!

  • @pwinsider007

    @pwinsider007

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum the distance between the rockets should decrease because when length contraction happens then the distance between two points on the body with same accelaration decreases ,consider two ends of the rocket as two rockets and imagine a shape string between material of two rockets then if rocket's length contracts then the material between two rockets(which were the ends of original rocket) also contracts and we had imagined a shape of string on that material between two end that means string also contracts and doesn't snap.

  • @pwinsider007

    @pwinsider007

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum when we replace string with rod then the scenario shouldn't change because everything had same accelaration then first rocket can't apply pulling force on the rocket behind it because both rockets have same speed .

  • @Bluhbear
    @Bluhbear Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad you mentioned the thing about the rod, because I was going to ask, "What's the difference between two rockets connected by a string, and a single, long rocket?" I suppose this means, if you're planning on traveling at relativistic speeds, you'd better make sure you've built a tough enough ship to not snap apart.

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    If you get to relativistic speeds by accelerating very slowly for a long time, you don't need a very strong ship. It's the differential acceleration (along the length of the ship) that causes the ship to "snap", and the differential acceleration is proportional to the acceleration magnitude (and the size of the ship). So you have three variables you can affect, which are ship strength, ship acceleration and ship length. If for example your ship can take 1g of acceleration, then you can accelerate to relativistic speed in a few months.

  • @eklhaft4531

    @eklhaft4531

    Жыл бұрын

    It wouldn't really happen with real ship. Real ship would just contract instead of trying to maintain the same length for some outside observer. Outside observer would see the front of the ship get closer to the back of the ship (and therefore not accelerating at the same rate) however the ship doesn't care. It's true though that for this effect to become noticeable you need huge acceleration and therefore the ship needs to be tough enough to withstand the force of the engine.

  • @sly1024

    @sly1024

    Жыл бұрын

    This is exactly what I still don't understand about relativity. well, maybe there's a lot I don't understand :) I've seen several explanations for the twin paradox, and I still can't believe they experience different timespans, because according to *relativity* the equations should give you the same result no matter where you observe it from. Whether I stay on Earth or fly with the astronaut, I see the same thing: the other guy accelerates away, then he comes back. So why is one older than the other? This guy just said that relativity can handle accelerated frames! Everything is relative, there's no absolute position in space, is there?

  • @Bluhbear

    @Bluhbear

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sly1024 I'm not an expert, but I think, even though there's no absolute position or motion, _acceleration_ is a different thing. It seems to be at the heart of all these paradoxes. 🤔

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sly1024 special relativity is a special case of general relativity. Special relativity can handle acceleration when the general relativity effects that come with it are small enough that they can be neglected. Regarding the twin paradox, the acceleration is not even the important part. You can come up with a version of the twin paradox that does not have any acceleration, by using three observers. Observer A stays on Earth, observer B passes by next to the Earth at high speed without slowing down and synchronizes their clock with A to start counting. Another observer C is very far away on the same path of B, but coming from the opposite direction (going towards the Earth). When B and C meet (without stopping), B can tell C the value of his clock, and C can continue counting from that value. When C reaches A (again without stopping), they can compare the clocks, and they will find that A's clock has a measured a bigger time that C's clock (which includes the time experienced by B and C). None of tho three observers experienced acceleration at any point, but twins paradox effect happened regardless. So, how is the paradox resolved? When the "time keeping" is switched from the frame of B to the frame of C, their speed is the same, so time dilation does not play a role, but their direction is not the same, which changes the direction of the Lorentz transformation. This means that what B considers as "now" on Earth is not the same as what C considers as "now" on Earth. Imagine A and B met in 2010, with time dilation factor of 5, and then B and C met 5 years later in B's time. B would have seen Earth's time moving slower (because from his point of view the Earth is moving, so he would think that, when he meets C, the date on (far away) Earth is 2011, and is own time is 2015. C received the 2015 time from B, but does not agree that right now on Earth is 2011. In his frame of reference, on Earth it's 2059. Then, when C finally reaches A on Earth, he sees that his clock marks 2020 (B + C traveled for 10 years), and on Earth is now 2060 (his travel took 1 year of Earth's time from his point of view, because for him it's the Earth that is moving). Now you would argue, what about the Earth's perspective? Since the Earth's measurement of time was always in the same inertial frame, and Earth sees B's time going 5 times slower, then A would simply think that B met C in 2035 (2015 for B's time), and C then took the same 25 years to arrive at A in 2060. As you can see, the three reference frames do not agree on what time it is on Earth when B meets C. A thinks it's 2035, B thinks it's 2011 and C thinks it's 2059. This is relativity of simultaneity, which is as much real as length contraction and time dilation.

  • @mikewagner2299
    @mikewagner2299 Жыл бұрын

    New question: If Bernard sees Arthur accelerate too quickly, what if they choose not to accelerate at the same rate and Arthur calculates the lower acceleration (which may not be constant) such that Bernard sees Arthur always the same distance away. Would Charles see them getting closer together in a way that would exactly match length contraction so no one sees the string snap? I do understand peoples concern about Arthur and Bernard sharing a frame of reference. I think it would have been beneficial to explain why they see each other accelerate differently a little more in depth. I get that the curved axes would cause a changing distance but maybe explain the nature of why the axes curve

  • @person1082

    @person1082

    Жыл бұрын

    if the distance from a spaceship with proper acceleration A to the rindler horizon (apparent black hole from acceleration) is D, then another spaceship a distance d from the rindler horizon needs to accelerate at AD/d

  • @jergarmar

    @jergarmar

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, this is exactly correct. Assuming there's a bit of "give" in the string, and something to measure the tension, you could imagine Arthur slowing his acceleration to keep the same distance with Bernard and keeping the string from breaking. In that case Charles straightforwardly sees them accelerating differently, moving closer to each other, and the string doesn't break.

  • @RickSummon

    @RickSummon

    Жыл бұрын

    If the ships accelerate at different rates to keep the string from breaking, this is called Born rigidity.

  • @darenmiller2218
    @darenmiller2218 Жыл бұрын

    I’ve actually seen this happen in a test. The string turns into a Jacob’s Ladder. Pretty incredible findings.

  • @burrahobbithalf
    @burrahobbithalf Жыл бұрын

    I would treat the ships and string as one object, which experiences length contraction. Just like two ends of a ruler the ships would appear closer together, so the string doesn't snap in any reference frame.

  • @richardb4313

    @richardb4313

    Жыл бұрын

    This is what I think as well. The 2 ships are in the same frame of reference. The distance between them does not change for them and there is no shrinkage from their own observations. To an observer in a relatively slower frame of reference the rockets and the space between them both shrink, as they act as one object. The thought experiment is trying to cast the string as somehow belonging in another frame of reference, which is nonsense,

  • @user-pr6ed3ri2k

    @user-pr6ed3ri2k

    Жыл бұрын

    the ships have separate accelerations + string =/= pole that maintains a "constant" distance therefore they are not the same

  • @user-pr6ed3ri2k

    @user-pr6ed3ri2k

    Жыл бұрын

    i mean 1 object

  • @warchitect73

    @warchitect73

    Жыл бұрын

    @Retired Bore Exactly imo. just because people are in different places on this one "double-ship" shouldnt matter to space time or the universe. also, if the video is right, consider, a single ship is still a bunch of different components with length, so all the parts of the ship down to the plank length in the direction of travel would all snap apart everywhere while accelerating too right?

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    The ships have their own thrust and the string is too weak to affect anything, so they act independently. They can't be treated one object. There are technically 4 frames of reference here: Charles, Arthur, Bernard, and the string... but since the string isn't conscious, it isn't a very interesting point of view.

  • @KaktitsMartins
    @KaktitsMartins Жыл бұрын

    Ok, but now im interested in the scenario where they are connected with thick metal bar - it wont break as easily, but will with enough acceleration/ speed? How does it differ from a single long spaceship?

  • @tomkerruish2982

    @tomkerruish2982

    Жыл бұрын

    It differs in that a single long spaceship is not usually thought of as having rockets at both ends, applying thrust in the same direction. With sufficient competing thrust, the ship will tear itself apart.

  • @kurtpena5462

    @kurtpena5462

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tomkerruish2982 The premise was identical rockets with identical acceleration.

  • @dj1NM3

    @dj1NM3

    Жыл бұрын

    This should (in total) act identically to a single, lager ship with two identical rocket engines operating at the same time.

  • @VOIP4ME

    @VOIP4ME

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dj1NM3 The difference being that the long ship could withstand a much greater amount of force (due to length contraction) before breaking.

  • @dj1NM3

    @dj1NM3

    Жыл бұрын

    @@VOIP4ME Considering that it would all accelerate together, an outside observer would see it all length contract together as a single object, because that's exactly what it is. The occupants at either end would see no contraction of their ships nor the rigid bar, because it's all travelling together and accelerating together. If that wasn't true, then the ships themselves would be breaking apart at the same rate as you're imaging the rigid bar would be and the whole lot would turn into fast-moving space junk at whatever velocity it all went "KABLOWIE!!" at.

  • @andrewparker8636
    @andrewparker8636 Жыл бұрын

    Fair warn: I'm definitely at the limits of what I recall about relativity here. I'm impressed by this paradox because I'm probably going to be unable to resolve it without getting the books out. Regardless, I'll state a couple of things that are confusing me about this. Much of this has been said below, but I wanted to highlight why I object to some of the rebuttals about these points. My initial reaction (like many below) is that we should be able to treat the two ships and the string as one "object". After all, what's the difference between a piece of string and the bulkheads of each ship. Much of the objections here come down to things like "we've got relativistic speeds so the acceleration is massive and thus the string is weak" or "there's time delay in the forces in the atoms and molecules". However, none of this is relevant as far as I can see. We can accelerate the ships as slowly as we like and thus with forces as weak as we like. Sure, it'll take a long time to get up to relativistic speeds, but for a thought experiment that's irrelevant. In fact, the starting speed is almost irrelevant. Why not just accelerate a blob of matter to 0.99C (relative to the stationary observer) then build the two ships and string from that blob of matter. In the blob's reference frame there's no issue with doing that - there will be no broken string. Now we just accelerate a little bit more. Apply a tiny force. The string won't break. The question is then what the observer would see. They should indeed see length contraction but that's a contraction of the whole system. It's not contracting about any specific point. It's contracting uniformly. This is similar to how the universe expands, but in reverse - it's doesn't expand from a point it expands everywhere. So the entire system contracts (as far as the observer sees it) and the string doesn't break. I feel like there's some erroneous thinking in the argument about the attachment points of the string. We said nothing about the attachment points of the string. We could repeat the experiment with the same ships, but attach the string at different points to the ships. Should this change the forces on the string? I don't believe so. It shouldn't matter.

  • @JustMe-vz3wd

    @JustMe-vz3wd

    Жыл бұрын

    wait wait wait. your brilliant post got NO replies. I scrolled a bit and this is by far the best post. I liked the "blob" explanation. First reach the near speed of ligjt and than construct the two ships and string, all while in THEIR reference frame. If this are three objects, two ships and a string, its just a matter of how you view it. It can be viewed as one object, or many objects, all the different parts of the spaceship. i feel these hypotheses get more and more just a funny trick with little essence to the awesome reality of relativity. I guess as a youtuber you gotta keep it up with the crazy stuff ^_^ Anyway, thanks for yr explanation.

  • @ImHeadshotSniper

    @ImHeadshotSniper

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JustMe-vz3wd they're setting entirely new conditions which oppose the ones set in the video, which is simply not at all the same problem anymore. firstly, their presumption that "applying a tiny force" to a string won't break it sets entirely new conditions, because the whole point of this paradox is to not just "not break" the string, but ultimately leave ZERO load between the rockets, so that the string between them is not being pulled one way or the other as the accelerate to the speed of light from a stop. secondly, building a string while you're already at the speed of light is ALSO setting entirely new conditions, because the point of this video is that you're starting from a speed of zero, and accelerating to the speed of light. building a string at the speed of light skips the MASSIVELY important step of the space time relation during acceleration, as was amazingly visualized at 8:06 if you simply start attaching the string together at the speed of light, then of course the space in between them doesn't change any more, because you've stopped accelerating... the takeaway from this video is that 2 things accelerating at the same rate leave a greater and greater distance of space in between them as they do so even if they're doing it at exactly the same rate, which is mind blowing to me.

  • @JustMe-vz3wd

    @JustMe-vz3wd

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ImHeadshotSniper the point some people including myself are making is, should we view it as two things accelerating, or as one thing accelarating.

  • @ImHeadshotSniper

    @ImHeadshotSniper

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JustMe-vz3wd i totally understand that, and i actually also thought as well at first, but i commented to someone else that at 9:01 he actually clarifies this paradox as requiring the ships to be stronger than the string, and that the string be strong, but not strong enough to withstand space expanding the distance between them as they accelerate as shown at 8:06 to be fair, this seems to limit the conditions of the paradox to the weakness of the "string", when of course as many people immedately said, if the string was as strong as both ships, that it would effectively be one load and the front load would be pulling the rest of it as one load because it's a theoretical unbreakable material that can withstand light scale speeds as well as the expansion of space which would make it one whole vehicle if i'm not mistaken (i could very well be :p)

  • @Yambolic

    @Yambolic

    Жыл бұрын

    I may have missed something in all of this but "what the observer would see" depends on where the observer is in relation to the spaceships and string, doesn't it? If the observer is stationary, he ain't gonna see much at all as the ships and string are moving too fast. If he's in another spaceship travelling along with and at the same rate of acceleration as the spaceships and string what will he see then?

  • @christianosminroden7878
    @christianosminroden7878 Жыл бұрын

    6:22 When an accelerating ship A and a ship with constant speed B meet each other when they‘re at the same speed, the accelerating one did NOT catch up with the other, but the other way round. Before they meet, A was slower than B, so B caught up with A just to fall behind again immediately after the meeting.

  • @minhdang1775
    @minhdang1775 Жыл бұрын

    The problem is again due to the fact that we don’t all agree on simultaneous events. while from one frame, the rockets accelerated at the same rate, the rocket behind were slightly in the future compared to the rocket at further ahead. that means the rocket behind is the one that has less acceleration in their individual frames where their clocks reads exact same time compared to each other, therefore it got left behind, cause a stress on the string. Great video as always!

  • @ShawnHCorey

    @ShawnHCorey

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed. The rockets do not start accelerating at the same time, as seen from each of constant-velocity rockets. This is the same thing as described in the video but with different emphasis. That's the thing about relativity: there are often many ways to describe what's going on.

  • @josephsalomone

    @josephsalomone

    Жыл бұрын

    This is a bad explanation, as it would imply that rockets moving up instead of chasing would also have the string break, because they will not view each other moving at the same acceleration due to their distance.

  • @ShawnHCorey

    @ShawnHCorey

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephsalomone Rockets that are side by side are different than rockets that are one in front of the other.

  • @josephsalomone

    @josephsalomone

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ShawnHCorey Not the way this is explained. The only proper way to explain this phenomenon is with a spacetime diagram, otherwise you end up having to explain why other cases are not paradoxes.

  • @minhdang1775

    @minhdang1775

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephsalomone as I said, in their own frames, each rocket has different acceleration because their clocks reads the exact same time (ignoring the effect of a uniform gravitational field on flow of time). From the Charles’s perspective, the clock on the rocket at the left were slightly in the future compared to the rocket at the right in just the right amount, therefore both have the same acceleration in this unique frame. If in each individual frame, all the rockets were accelerated at the same time, from Charles’s frame, the rocket at the left will accelerate first, and the one at the right will accelerate last, and distance between them shrinks, also known as an increasing in length contraction.

  • @gravitron12
    @gravitron12 Жыл бұрын

    This is why I love this channel. I can finally understand another topic that I was not sure of.

  • @AlwinMao
    @AlwinMao Жыл бұрын

    Most 'spaceships' we consider to be single entities because their tensile strengths are able to maintain a constant proper length by decelerating the front end and accelerating the back end: the tension of the craft pulls the front back and pulls the back forward. This is very unintuitive because the scale of this effect is L(a/c)^2 for length L, acceleration a, and speed of light c. For a typical acceleration 1 m/s/s and distance m, the acceleration difference to be overcome is only 10^-17 m/s/s. If we speed up to 10g (100x the accel) and 1000 m (1km) this is still only 10^-10 m/s/s. So even a relatively fragile 1 N string could hold together a 10^10 kg pair of spaceships at 10g acceleration and 1km distance. So it's easy for a bulk spaceship to be treated as one entity in many situations, and even easy for the string situation to be treated as one entity. But an infinitely fragile string would break apart.

  • @TheMrJizzus
    @TheMrJizzus8 ай бұрын

    That blooper with the clone is pure genius and mastery of story telling. Keep it up Nick!

  • @jonathanhadden7157
    @jonathanhadden7157 Жыл бұрын

    Not only was this really cool factually, but you explained it in such a way even laymen could follow. Thank you!

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad I was able to deliver 🤓

  • @rayzimmermin

    @rayzimmermin

    Жыл бұрын

    except length contraction is just an optical illusion that only the outside observer sees and is not a real thing phonically happening to the ships so how dose an optical illusion brake the string

  • @ImHeadshotSniper

    @ImHeadshotSniper

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rayzimmermin if i'm not mistaken, length contraction is very much not an illusion, but rather is the very real result of a lengthening of space between A and B being created by the acceleration of both rockets, which i thought was amazingly visualized at 8:06 again i could be mistaken as i don't know what i'm talking about, but that's just what i took from it

  • @rayzimmermin

    @rayzimmermin

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ImHeadshotSniper if length contraction is real and not an illusion then why dose the third person observer not notice it also how is it that length contraction dose not effect the distance between sub atomic partials if acceleration resulted in space lengthening between A and B then why dose the space between sub atomic particle A and sub atomic particle B also lengthen and rip things apart as they accelerate remember solid objects are not really solid because they are made up of small things that are not touching or firmly connected to one another and have space in between them that should expand with acceleration yet they do not if the theory was correct you would expect that the faster an object moves the further apart the sub atomic particles that make it up will get from each other resulting in the object essentially expanding and disintegrating as all the sub atomic particles move further away from each other to the point they can no longer maintain the sebility of the object they make up

  • @ImHeadshotSniper

    @ImHeadshotSniper

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rayzimmermin 1. i would guess that it's because the contraction happens at a speed faster than the stationary third observer can possibly observe because they'd be moving faster than the light is reaching the observer. i don't believe there was actually an example of an observer that followed the rockets as they accelerated. i would imagine it was for the sake of demonstrating relativity because stationary things only receive light as fast as it travels to them, which i think was a really good idea by Science Asylum. 2. well he actually even showed shown in the video at 9:01 that with enough strength that the string would become part of the entire load and the 2 rockets would be connected, but it would be the front one dragging the back one because of the distance between them expanding as they accelerate faster than space can keep them in the same position in time as the were at at 0 speed. i believe the conditions of this paradox though is imagining that the string is strong, but not strong enough to withstand a certain amount of space stretching. 3. i would guess that this is because in this theoretical example, the rocketships forms are "infinitely" strong and can withstand a subatomic destruction, just for the sake of theory and thought experiment. 4. subatomic particles in solid objects don't expand with space because it's impossible for solid objects to move even close to the speed that it happens at a noticable level, unless you have an infinitely strong rocketship of course. as Science Asylum said in another video "The Speed of Light is Infinite", the equation for velocity has additional variables which Einstein determined, which relates a velocity to the speed of light, which of course are only practical for problems regarding objects moving at a large fraction of c or the speed of light. to the regular human experience and the fastest speeds we can possibly achieve, this variable relating to light speed effectively 1, meaning roughly zero influence in the additional velocity equation, because the additional equation relates to the speed of light, and even our fastest possible theoretical speeds for objects with mass are not even close to being able to influence the additional variable in the equation because things with mass can only move a very negligible fraction of the speed of light. (as far as we currently know)

  • @greatPretender79
    @greatPretender79 Жыл бұрын

    Oh boy, a Science Asylum video complete with a "to the time line" on a Friday afternoon! Gonna be a great weekend

  • @ShellShocks14
    @ShellShocks14 Жыл бұрын

    8:44 holy moly this has bothered me for a long time, thanks for clearing it up. As i watch these i pause and think, and just before the timestamp i mentioned i paused and worked out in my head this issue and im so happy to see you explain why we’re using a string specifically. Also, this thought problem reminds me of the observers in the train/lightning thought experiment. It seems like ultimately, the string breaks for the same reason the observer in the train sees the bolts strike in succession (in the direction if the train) but the outside observer sees both bolts strike at the same time. W video good job!!

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @cahdoge
    @cahdoge Жыл бұрын

    Wouldn't this scenario suggest, that with enough accelleration objects with finite bonding strength would eventually be torn apart? Yes and it dosen't even have to be relativistic. once the increase in distance between two points is faster, than the speed of sound in the material it should seperate.

  • @cahdoge

    @cahdoge

    7 ай бұрын

    I never said anyhting abuot velocity. But I can answer my question now; If we accelerate by pushing, they would not. Since, length contraction and acceleration would smush them. If done by pulling, they would, for one reason or the other. But what it does notdo, is contradict spcial, or general relativity.

  • @juzoli
    @juzoli Жыл бұрын

    But why is there no length contraction for the cable? It is also moving fast, why it is excluded? It just joins them into one big spaceship. Because of length contraction, the 2 spaceships appears to be closer to each other, so it doesn’t snap… There is no paradox…

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    The string's _attempted_ length contraction is the whole reason it snaps for Charles. The string is _trying_ to contract but the ships prevent it by maintaining their distance. This lowers the "relaxed length" of the string without lowering it's actual length, thereby putting tension on the string. The distance does not contract.

  • @juzoli

    @juzoli

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum But the apparent distance between the ship contracts too. Length contraction is not selective.

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    @@juzoli Ah, but distance and length are not the same thing. They may both contract sometimes, but usually not in the same frame of reference.

  • @viralsheddingzombie5324

    @viralsheddingzombie5324

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum The string has mass and it is accelerating, so it MUST also contract. Charles is an inertial observer, he does not interact with the ship-string-ship system at all. BOOM! We don't actually know if the two ships maintained their distance, that was merely an assumption or a possibility. Given Nick's logic, the string would snap ONLY if each ship moved away from each other, rather than move closer to each other. 2 x BOOM!!

  • @yfakolh7154

    @yfakolh7154

    Жыл бұрын

    @@juzoli the distance from C's perspective doesn't change. The "distance" is not moving, just think about stationary ruler in the background. But the moving rope contracts and breaks. If the distance were to be contracting, the acceleration of trailing rocket would have to be greater than the heading one. Such acceleration difference could be caused e.g. by heading rocket dragging the second one when connected by stronger material. In classical one engine rocket at the rear it's the back that pushes the front creating the traveled distance difference equal to the length contraction.

  • @Kazemahou
    @Kazemahou Жыл бұрын

    Why is the string magical? It has to be, in order for any of this to be true. If both ships accelerate at the same speed, in tandem, then they are travelling together as a unit. They share the same frame of reference because they are stationary relative to each other. Putting a string between them is no different than putting a girder between them, or simply building more ship - a long tube of more ship - that connects them, making them a single, super-long ship. All share the same frame of reference! If this 'string breaking' business were the least bit true, then it would become impossible to build ships of any length. No super-long tube ships, no train-like ships composed of innumerable cars in sequence. Why? Because if the string breaks, so would the ship - the ship would snap in the middle. The string is effectively more ship between the ships. The string isn't somehow magically outside the observed contraction. What an observer not in the frame of reference should see is that the total unit of two ships and string between collectively contract. Uniformly, over the whole. Why? Because ships and attached strings all share the same frame of reference. The crew on the ships should see no contraction of themselves or the string, and no stress on the string whatsoever. Why? Because both ships and the string that binds them are one object, in effect, which shares the same frame of reference. All are moving at the same speed, all are accelerating in tandem, all are one single reference frame together. Again, replace the string with beams and girders and more ship. Now you have a really long jumbo-dog ship. The ship is a whole unit, it moves as one object because it is one object and the frame of reference aboard that ship is uniform throughout. Why? Because every part is accelerating uniformly. Just like the two ships bound by string. All is, in that frame of reference, accelerating uniformly. The string should not break, and there should be no paradox at all. Nobody should see the string break any more than they should see each ship snap in twain. The string is not magical, it is just sharing the same frame of reference as the ships. There should be no paradox, and no confusion about this whatsoever. The ships don't somehow magically contract separately from each other - this isn't about matter. This is about the apparent contraction of a frame of reference, and that includes anything between the ships that bridges them, so long as it is travelling within the same frame of reference of the ships. If this were not true, the ships would snap in two due to contraction, or, a very long ship would snap in two because of contraction. And if that happened, one would have to claim that, despite accelerating as a unit, together, somehow the front of the long ship is in a different frame of reference than the back. That should be testable even on a small ship. It should be universal that the front and back of any object exist in different reference frames - and I have never heard such a thing in my life. Tell me how I am wrong! Tell me how any of this is the least bit wrong! I need to know - because to my reasoning, all objects within the same frame of reference share that frame of reference. That is what I have understood for the past fifty years. How is that wrong?

  • @TJTapia6

    @TJTapia6

    Жыл бұрын

    It's a trick question. The ships are only in the same reference frame from the point of view of a third party observer. If they were in the same reference frame the distance between them would get smaller as they accelerate due to length contraction. They only appear to maintain a constant distance, even though they accelerate (and experience length contraction) because the ship in front is actually accelerating more. If you had an additional engine on the front of your long ship powerful enough to prevent relativistic length contraction it would tear your ship apart.

  • @Kazemahou

    @Kazemahou

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TJTapia6 The example given has both ships accelerating at the same speed at the same rate. This is clearly stated! That means that the front ship is - not - accelerating relative to the rear ship - they are moving at the same acceleration, at the same speed, together. It was specifically stated that they had the same acceleration and speed. If this is true, then from their frame of reference, they would be - stationary - with respect to each other. By definition, their frame of reference would be the same - that is literally what that means. If this is so, then the - space - between the two ships should appear to contract to an outside observer, which means the string should never break and no tension should be applied. The string links both ships, making them one object - it doesn't matter that it is a string, it could be a metal beam. They are one thing, one object, one frame of reference. They are attached, and all parts move at the same speed, the same acceleration. They are a single unit. My point stands. An outside observer should see the entire unit contract uniformly - because it is one single thing, one single frame of reference. It isn't 'Two Ships'. It is a single 'Supership' that just happens to have part of its structure made up of string instead of metal. If this were not true, all ships would rip themselves apart in the middle as they accelerated to relativistic speeds. The material - string versus metal - should not matter. The entire group is one ship, part metal, part string. It is one thing, one frame of reference. That is my point. That, I think, is the entire point. Unless, of course, it is true that a really long starship - say miles long, like one of the ships from Dune or Star Wars in scale - would, in fact, rip apart in the middle. I want Nick to address this. I think I am correct - that all things sharing the same reference frame must appear to contract uniformly because they share the same reference frame. It isn't about matter, it is about space. Thus no paradox. Unless I missed something and it - is - stated that the ships - are - accelerating at different velocities, in which case there still is no paradox since that would always break the string, even at conventional speeds.

  • @wrOngplan3t

    @wrOngplan3t

    Жыл бұрын

    "The string is not magical, it is just sharing the same frame of reference as the ships" This and the rest you wrote is my understanding as well. Sure I'm no particle physicist, and my head hurts from this video, but I'm not convinced. This continues to be my understanding.

  • @jetison333

    @jetison333

    Жыл бұрын

    Accelerating at the same rate only makes sense in one reference frame. Either the ships are accelerating at the same rate in a stationary frame and appear to accelerate differently in their own, or they accelerate the same in their own reference frame, and accelerate differently in a stationary one. In the former the string breaks, in the later it doesn't. If you wanted to build a long ship, you would just have to set the engines to not accelerate at the same rate as observed from a stationary reference frame, and rather set them to accelerate at the same rate in your own accelerating reference frame.

  • @eyeOfAC

    @eyeOfAC

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree. The spacehip enters the frame of reference, not the other way around.

  • @DEtchells
    @DEtchells Жыл бұрын

    Ok, so here’s the super-extra bonus points question: ==> What is the *stress* in the string as a function of acceleration, velocity, masses of the spaceships and the separation distance? I’m having a hard time thinking of the ships and string being in different reference frames, but I think it comes down to the distance between the ships divided by the speed of light somehow; that seems like it would be the key to the amount of difference between their reference frames. The way the problem is drawn leads us to think of a separation of maybe a few hundred meters, and I think over that sort of distance, anything other than an unimaginably weak string would keep the two rockets in the same reference frame. OTOH, a thousand KM separation would result in a greater effect. I think I can accept that the string needs to exert a force on the rockets to keep everything in the same frame, it’s just that the effect is going to be pretty tiny unless the acceleration gets really large. So here’s the question: Can we calculate how much force the string needs to exert as a function of distance, the masses, the velocity and the acceleration? I don’t remotely have the math or physics ability to do that calculation, but I, sure someone does, and I think the answer would be very interesting. (!)

  • @instantdominator2121
    @instantdominator2121 Жыл бұрын

    3:43 "The string can't be both broken and unbroken." Well, about that...

  • @themcchuck8400
    @themcchuck8400 Жыл бұрын

    Nicely done, sir. Informative and entertaining as usual. Thank you for your efforts!

  • @brianm1143
    @brianm1143 Жыл бұрын

    From Charles' point of view wouldn't the ship-string-ship contract equally as an entire unit? If so even from his perspective why would it place more tension on the string? Wouldn't this be analogous to drawing ship-string-ship on a stretched rubber sheet and de-stretching the whole sheet a bit? This scenario implies string would feel the effect of its own shape being distorted due to its (relative) speed regardless of frame of reference which seems to not make sense? I'm confused :)

  • @dmitriy4708

    @dmitriy4708

    Жыл бұрын

    From Charles' frame of reference ship-string-ship contracts all the same, but the distance between ships does not contract, so the string is under tension and snaps. Only objects contract.

  • @jimpinkerton1352

    @jimpinkerton1352

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dmitriy4708 Wait, so you are saying that objects traveling at relativistic speeds don't distort space/time?

  • @dmitriy4708

    @dmitriy4708

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jimpinkerton1352 Speed is relative to the observer, so how can the speed of 2 objects influence the contraction of space between them if this space is not really moving in any frame of reference? Any moving objects contracts in space in the direction of movement, space is not moving.

  • @dcterr1
    @dcterr1 Жыл бұрын

    Wow, that's a neat paradox! It's much more subtle than the twin paradox or the car in the garage (aka the pole and the barn) paradox, which is probably why it wasn't resolved until much later. Relativity is great, and this was a great explanation! Keep up the good work, and stay a bit crazy like myself!

  • @chrismcgarry3160
    @chrismcgarry3160 Жыл бұрын

    6:05 - 8:05 Momentarily Comoving Inertial Frames : What an elegant tool for accelerating Frames! Very nice job on the graphs btw! I understood everything on first watch! Plus I'm a big fan of playing with SpaceTime diagrams and black holes, so there's that too!

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad you liked it 🤓

  • @pwinsider007

    @pwinsider007

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@ScienceAsylumwhat force causes the snapping of string,length contraction is not a force and everything in the universe must be explained by four fundamental forces.which fundamental force snaps the string if length contraction is not a force ?

  • @kerryhaycock9446
    @kerryhaycock9446 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Nick , great explanation ! On another topic , I agree with Joe Scott that KZread is increasingly filling with sites offering science content from opportunists cobbling together snippets of others work with inane voice overs and comments . This is why I turn to you for sensible discussion about sometimes controversial subjects . JWST and it’s achievements so far is something I’d love to hear your summary of , as there is so much “ science “ rubbish and click bait out there. Always look forward to your videos ! Respects !

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    I hate that those "cobbled together snippets" perform so well. It's so frustrating. Whenever my content shows up in them, I have them taken down, but it's like wack-a-mole. They just keep coming.

  • @feynstein1004
    @feynstein1004 Жыл бұрын

    This thought experiment has the same vibe as "when you heat a metal plate with a hole, does the hole expand or contract?" 😂

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    I loved discussing that metal plate example back when I was teaching in the classroom.

  • @dj1NM3

    @dj1NM3

    Жыл бұрын

    I know from experience that if the metal "plate" is only a few times bigger than the hole (ie: a typical bushing, pulley or gear), then the hole will get bigger because its not constrained, as the outside perimeter will also get bigger. If the plate is effectively an infinite plane (eg: a 12mm hole drilled in the hull of a container ship) and the heated metal is constrained by the rest of metal around it, then the most likely thing to happen is the hole to get a little smaller and the plate to buckle and pucker to give the expanded metal somewhere to go, the extent of both dependent on how much of the plate around the hole is heated.

  • @jameelarosetafoya2058

    @jameelarosetafoya2058

    Жыл бұрын

    So what's the answer? Do the electrons closest to heat source move faster and expand. Is it quick cook or slow roast? Is it iron or copper? Ok, what if we take a basic element like Hydrogen to its plasma state, then with electric charge and Lazer cooling immediately harder said plasma in the shape of a plate wit ah hole n it, could I still eat a donut off it when places in the center and thrown at light speed 2 my buddy?

  • @feynstein1004

    @feynstein1004

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jameelarosetafoya2058 I don't know 😅

  • @rjdruhan
    @rjdruhan Жыл бұрын

    It's snaps because of the contraction for all three. But for a person in an accelerating ship, contraction "looks" like the other ship moving away a bit. The ship is still contracting, and that is what causes the snap.

  • @laxminarayanbhandari855
    @laxminarayanbhandari855 Жыл бұрын

    I remember reading about this paradox on Physics Stack Exchange. Also, Sciencephile the AI had also made a video about special relativistic paradoxes in which he mentioned this. Nice video.

  • @BartvandenDonk

    @BartvandenDonk

    Жыл бұрын

    Can you place a link to that one?

  • @erumaaro6060
    @erumaaro6060 Жыл бұрын

    So, in the scenario where the string is replaced by spring (essentially a string that doesn't snap...), how would the tension affect the ships. In the string case, they are traveling at the same speed from clone C's point of view, but from the point of view of the string, both ships should move away from it, pulling it taught. The tension should add/subtract from the thrust, and clone C should see them coming closer. I think there is a scenario where the string doesn't snap (distance stays constant), but only if at least one rocket's acceleration changes over time. We know that length contracts to 0 at the speed of light, so the two curves in the space-time diagram (from clone C's perspective!) must touch at infinity (both time and space, =>asymptotic), meaning the front rocket must accelerate slower than the back, and acceleration cannot be constant for both (unless the distance is zero) since the hyperbolas will either diverge or cross instead of becoming co-tangent. So the difference in acceleration needed is a function of time (#canOfWorms) and the initial length of the string.

  • @petarmisic281
    @petarmisic281 Жыл бұрын

    When I first heard about this my initial thought was that since accelerating objects towards the speed of light actually increases their relativistic mass (assuming if affects the spacetime curvature), that at some point the mass of the two spaceships would be so great the gravitational pull (curvature) they both exert would pull on the string until it snaps.

  • @ophidahlia1464

    @ophidahlia1464

    Жыл бұрын

    "Relativistic mass" isn't actually a real thing, it's more of a misguided teaching aid for beginning relativity (since it causes exactly this confusion), it's more correct to say that the momentum of an object increases with velocity. Rather than do a poor job of explaining it myself here's a few videos that dive into it deeper: kzread.info/dash/bejne/foh-w9ealcm6irA.html kzread.info/dash/bejne/oJOt2sF7ose4dps.html

  • @coloradoing9172

    @coloradoing9172

    Жыл бұрын

    No.

  • @rogerahier4750
    @rogerahier4750 Жыл бұрын

    it does not snap. Moving near c doesn't actually make the rockets shorter, it only makes it look like they are shorter. With the string attached, they become 1 object, so the ships look shorter, the string looks shorter, so the entier object is shorter meaning the space between them is (looks) shorter.

  • @nocare

    @nocare

    Жыл бұрын

    I will start by saying the following explanation relies on accepting that in the two seperate ship scenarios when they are not attached, the lead ship sees the rear ship falling behind. -Now if the second ship accelerates harder it can maintain its distance relative to the first ship from the perspective of the first ship. So we know greater acceleration from behind maintains the two ships as "one object" from the perspective of the lead ship. -Well if you replace the second ship with a long pole behind the first ship and each atom in that pole is like the second ship. The space between those atoms is the space between the first and second ship. The acceleration/thrust of all these atoms is the bonds to the atoms in front of them instead of an engine. -These atoms in the pole are maintained as "one object" because there bonds allow them to accelerate faster than the engine and spaceship itself. Once the acceleration required to keep pace with the ship exceeds the strength of the atomic bonds the end of the rod breaks off. From an outside observer this looks like the rods stretching as the rocket length contracts but the rear of the rod fails to keep up and upon failing to length contract to stay with the ship breaks off.

  • @rogerahier4750

    @rogerahier4750

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nocare If that were true, the ships would also split for the very same reason. They don't actually change size. They only look like it.

  • @nocare

    @nocare

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@rogerahier4750 Yes at a high enough fraction of light speed any ship will break apart. I said nothing about the ship actually changing size. Edit: Also the ship is actually shorter from the perspective of an inertial frame. That's how relativity works each reference frame is correct about what they see because all interactions with world are governed by the speed of light. That's how the ladder and the barn are able to work where the length contracted ladder fits inside and both doors close simultaneously but at rest the ladder is longer than the barn and so sticks out both sides. The entire premise of relativity of simultaneity is that viewers can disagree on the timing of events and both are actually in reality correct. Since the waves responsible for physical interactions also propagate at the speed of light a bending of the visual representation of an object also must bend all the waves propagating the physical interactions.

  • @rogerahier4750

    @rogerahier4750

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nocare It's not actually shorter, it only appears shorter. The reason it looks shorter is because of time dialation. It doesn't change the actual dimensions of an object, only how it appears. Since there is no difference in the relative speed of the 2 ships, they will be in the same time frame so they will notice no difference in each other. Relativity is just what it says. It works on the relative speed of an object in question. If there is no difference, there is no effect.

  • @tomaszkisiel9915
    @tomaszkisiel9915 Жыл бұрын

    Many years ago, when I was studying astrophysics, our natural philosophy professor asked us this exact question. We couldn't agree on the answer and he never explained it. Up until now, I wasn't sure of the answer but your explanation makes total sense. Thanks so much! :D

  • @Martin-kn1cn

    @Martin-kn1cn

    7 ай бұрын

    If you want to finally get closure you can look at this paper from two Japanese scientists about this exact problem. Just search the following on google and click on the first link: Takuya Matsuda and Atsuya Kinoshita “A Paradox of Two Space Ships in Special Relativity” AAPPS Bulletin February 2004

  • @davidedrich6985
    @davidedrich6985 Жыл бұрын

    I liked the “visual approximations” of the two other scientists. It’s like an Easter Egg.

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    😂

  • @ludvercz

    @ludvercz

    Жыл бұрын

    I was just about to comment that.

  • @paradox7358
    @paradox7358 Жыл бұрын

    What if you replaced the string with a laser to measure the distance between the rockets? Would the measurement change? Would each rocket measure the same distance?

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    The laser would measure an increasing distance for all the observers. The inertial observer would see the "real" distance being constant, and would conclude that the "increase" in distance value measured by the laser is caused by the light having to "chase" one of the spaceships. Even if the internal mechanisms of the laser are time dilated, the roundtrip time measured by the laser will still be higher, since the time it takes for the roundtrip in the inertial frame increases by a factor of 1/(1 - v2/c2), while the time dilation has a factor of 1/sqrt(1 - v2/c2) [the first expression is always bigger than the second, because the square root of a number that is less than one is always bigger than the number]. For the two spaceship, they will see the same increase in distance measured by the laser, but they will say that it is a "real" distance increase, caused by the other spaceship actually lagging behind.

  • @welrann

    @welrann

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Manuel-cx6ob The inertial observer wouldn't see anything since laser measurement is technique involving sending laser beam from one point to another to measure distance between them and both points are not this observer in this case. Also laser measurement would show increasing distance because of lower speed of light in accelerated system or it could become infinite depending of acceleration.

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@welrann there is nothing preventing the inertial observer from looking at the result of the laser measurement, even if the device is on the ship. For example, if the laser measurement device has a screen and the ship has a window, the inertial observer can just look at the screen as the spaceship is passing by. The value they will see will be the same as the value that the observer on the ship will see, but the explaination they will have for the value will be different. Also, while it is true that acceleration causes an additional lag, it's not really the main effect as long as the acceleration is not very big. The laser would measure a bigger distance than the inertial observer sees even if the ships stopped accelerating, as long as they are at relativistic speeds. That's caused by the light having to chase one of the spaceships, increasing the distance it has to travel to do a roundtrip. The distance that the light travels for a round trip in the inertial frame is cL/(c-v) + cL/(c+v), which is 2c2 L/(c2-v2), or rearranged: 2L 1/(1-v2/c2). As you can see, the factor by which the light travel path has increased is greater than the factor of time dilation for the laser (which is the square root of that factor), so the inertial observer will see the (moving) laser measuring a longer distance than the distance between the two spaceships in the inertial frame, and they will conclude that the measurement is "wrong" because the light has to travel longer to catch up with one of the two ships.

  • @jetison333

    @jetison333

    Жыл бұрын

    @@welrann they wouldn't see the laser, but they could still model and figure out what the laser would measure.

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@classicalmechanic8914 But I'm the one saying that the effect of the acceleration on the laser measurement is negligible. :D The whole idea of the laser measuring a bigger distance than the inertial observer measures from its frame depends only on the fact that the ships are moving at relativistic speed, no acceleration or general relativity required.

  • @AnyVideo999
    @AnyVideo999 Жыл бұрын

    Rewatching this one again months later, still great. Only thing I'm trying to wrap my head around is an equivalence principal twist. Imagine an observer in freefall over a uniform gravitational field, say an infinite planar planet. On this planet we have two rocket ships, each exhibiting enough thrust to hover perfectly. Attached to each rocket is a string. With this preamble, we should expect a similar outcome as the freefall observer should view the hovering rockets as accelerating. However, we should expect from real world experience that there should be no tension in the rope. We have an apparent break in the paradox. Thankfully, there is likewise no problems here. All I've done is changed who agrees that the distance never changes. And in this setup, we *finally* have the two rockets come together as their length is contracted together from the freefall observer's perspective. The two situations are rather quite different, and because one rocket is in a different vertical position than the other, the freefall observer actually does not see the two rockets accelerate at the same rate but rather that the back rocket has been accelerating faster.

  • @14arma
    @14arma Жыл бұрын

    I actually did this experiment, 2 model spaceships with string taught between each, both accelerating at the same rate away from CBR at the edge of the observable universe. String stayed in tact and no change.

  • @fredk4745

    @fredk4745

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah but i dont think you accelerated them to the speed of light...

  • @14arma

    @14arma

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fredk4745 That depends on where you're measuring from. From the edge of the observable universe they were going the speed of light. But really you can accelerate forever in 1 direction and never get to the speed of light.

  • @MrPaxio

    @MrPaxio

    Жыл бұрын

    where? on roblox?

  • @SD-vd3mh

    @SD-vd3mh

    11 ай бұрын

    Not sure if its a joke, but this is actually valid. Any gravitational field should be indistinguishable from acceleration!

  • @Mr-Pulse
    @Mr-Pulse Жыл бұрын

    If the ships accelerate at the same rate and began at the same time, then why are they both not in the same interial frame, like the passing rockets going the same velocity. Also if the string is taught and attached to both ships why isn't the string accelerating and moving at the same speed? Why doesn't the whole conjoined setup contract together as one?

  • @MartinHabovstiak

    @MartinHabovstiak

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly this. If they really accelerate equally they should act as a single object and thus contract as whole, including the distances. The explanation makes it look like the strength of the string affects spacetime, which doesn't seem right.

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    They _start_ in the same frame of reference, but that's it. Once they're accelerating and acting under their own thrust, they're in separate frames.

  • @minhdang1775

    @minhdang1775

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MartinHabovstiak The distance between the them stays the same in the Charles’s frame, but not in their own frames. remember, in Charles’s frame, the clock on the left rocket ticks ahead of time compared to the rocket at the right due the the fact that simultaneity is relative. on each rocket’s frame, the rocket at the left has slightly less acceleration, because comparing to each other, their clock reads the same time, (ignoring equivalence principle gravitational field effect on time). in fact, if both rocket accelerated at the same time, Charles will see distance between them shrinks, because from his frame, the rocket at the left were accelerated first, because it was in the future compared to the rocket at the right. Welcome back to length contraction:-)

  • @MartinHabovstiak

    @MartinHabovstiak

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it'd help to define "same acceleration" relative to what and how we measure "started at the same time". Anyway, if it's correct the string snaps but a durable rod doesn't then there should be a force that can be calculated. Also the engine cones should feel this force trying to tear them apart in forward-backward direction.

  • @DanielKRui
    @DanielKRui Жыл бұрын

    In the diagrams you draw the rocket ships shrinking in length (contracting towards the middle) but what if we connect the rope at the exact center? Then why will length contraction still snap the string?

  • @Andrew-jh2bn

    @Andrew-jh2bn

    Жыл бұрын

    The rope itself is also contracting in length. The rope gets shorter, but the distance between ships is constant.

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    I _did_ connected my string to the center of mass of each ship because I didn't want the contraction of the ships to affect the string. It would have added an unnecessary level of complexity.

  • @ninjalo333
    @ninjalo333 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the new video! You remind me of a scientific version of Captain Disillusion. love it.

  • @Smitology
    @Smitology Жыл бұрын

    Also when you said the problem I immediately questioned the statement that the rockets see the other rocket the same distance away. If from an outside perspective they appear to have the same velocity at the same time, that doesn't translate to the rocket POV as seeing the other rocket being stationary at the same time because simultaneous events aren't absolute.

  • @TheHumanHades
    @TheHumanHades Жыл бұрын

    "Now we're cooking with gas" I don't know why I thought it was a bad joke but I laughed hard😂. I hope of understanding relativity completely after my NEET exam day after tomorrow. Thank you for making me understand many physics concepts in these 2.5 years of my preparation for the exam😀.

  • @SR-se6ii

    @SR-se6ii

    Жыл бұрын

    All the best for the results.....🤗

  • @hairlessape5107

    @hairlessape5107

    Жыл бұрын

    I laughed out loud at that too. Most of his jokes would be categorized as 'bad' by many (even though they laugh) but this was particularly good as both of him laughed afterward and the timing was perfect.

  • @hairlessape5107

    @hairlessape5107

    Жыл бұрын

    [Edited to add] And yes, good luck for the exam. [Edited to add] Lol at myself, nice editing.

  • @jensphiliphohmann1876

    @jensphiliphohmann1876

    Жыл бұрын

    I didn't really know this idiom before. However, the humor in it is quite a lot darker to me since I'm German...

  • @Blox117

    @Blox117

    Жыл бұрын

    i dont get it, the meaning of the phrase is not a joke

  • @Antifag1977
    @Antifag1977 Жыл бұрын

    Nick really does have a gift for explaining the most nuanced complex concepts in a way that even people of average intellect like Yours Truly can understand and conceptualize. In times past those who were gifted in teaching were afforded the greatest of respect and highest of honor. . Its such a shame...and irony...that humanity doesn't seem to value the imparting of knowledge now as much as it did in the past even though now we have much more knowledge to impart.

  • @glenncaughey5044

    @glenncaughey5044

    Жыл бұрын

    Finn McMissle, British Intelligence Tow Mater, average intelligence -Cars2

  • @SpectralRedshift
    @SpectralRedshift Жыл бұрын

    Lenght contraction also affects the space between the spaceships. For an outside observer it would look like the spaceships were getting shorter AND moving closer together. For anyone travelling with the spaceships there is no change in length or distance observable.

  • @gravitationalvelocity1905

    @gravitationalvelocity1905

    Жыл бұрын

    The distance between which two points on the ships? Front, center, back? Of the ships just get shorter around the center then string from center to center should not break.

  • @HD-fy2wu
    @HD-fy2wu Жыл бұрын

    Many people are asking why couldn't we treat the whole system as a body. From my understanding, length contration happens in any scale, so each and every molecule is contracting. Even if you focus on just one single ship, it does not contract as a whole, but every point on the ship is contracting. So if the ship is weak, for example it is made up of toilet paper, then when each and every point of the ship contracts, it will be torn apart due to the extra tention pulling the head and the tail of the ship towards each other (since all the material in between them are contracting). The reason why the ships in the video can contract as a whole is that they are made up of stronger material, so the head and the tail of the ship can be pulled towards each other when the material in between them contracts. That's why you can't treat the system shown in the video as one body. You can only do so if the string connecting the ships is changed to a rigid rod that doesn't break.

  • @AnthonyFlack

    @AnthonyFlack

    Жыл бұрын

    The length contraction occurs only in the perception of an outside observer. The ship doesn't experience being squashed. It's a core principle of relativity that it won't feel anything.

  • @HD-fy2wu

    @HD-fy2wu

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AnthonyFlack What I've said is indeed in the perception of an outside observer. The ship made of toilet paper would be torn apart because of contraction in the perception of an outside observer. If you want the perception of the ship itself, the ship will be torn apart because different parts of the ship are accelerating at a different rate in the perspection of each molecule of the toilet paper that makes up the ship, which is similar to what's explained in the video.

  • @BrianMelancon
    @BrianMelancon Жыл бұрын

    How is this scenario different from one in which the string goes from the front to the back of a single ship? Also it would seem to be the same as a single ship with one engine in front and one engine in back. In those cases one would think the string does not break - the system as a whole would contract. You seemed to briefly touch on it by mentioning the strong bar connecting the two. Where is the dividing line between three separate systems acting in unison and a single system with three parts?

  • @theoj608

    @theoj608

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the main issue is how he failed to define "same acceleration" if the 2 spaceships were in fact accelerating at the same exact speed, they would both be moving relative to the external observer, which is equivalent to the external observer accelerating while both ships stay stationary the observer would then observe a contraction of the ships yes, but also of the space between them regardless of contraction, saying the string must break when the ships accelerate would imply that the string would break between static ships when the observer moves, which is absurd the false assumption is that the space between the ships must stay the same to the external observer

  • @jeffwells641

    @jeffwells641

    Жыл бұрын

    This is my thought, he's treating the ships and string as three different frames of reference, but since they're all going the same speed shouldn't it be a single frame of reference? When the frame of reference contracts, shouldn't the ships shrink toward each other? I don't see how an arbitrary strength of connection is what makes the ships have a different frame of reference.

  • @welrann

    @welrann

    Жыл бұрын

    It isn't but acceleration from one drive is moved through a ship by a ship material and it can't stand an accelerations in which relativistic effects take places. The drive will just move through the ship and flew away. Leaving the ship behind with a hole from relativistic drive in it. In absolutely hard indestructible ship string would snap.

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@welrann reaching relativistic speed does not require "relativistic" acceleration. You can reach values very close to the speed of light in a few months of simple 1 G acceleration. To answer the original question, if the string is attached to the start and end of the same spaceship, it will contract together with the spaceship because both ends of the string are accelerating at the same rate in the ship's reference frame, so there is no tension in the string (let's say the mass of the string is negligible). The acceleration being the same is enforced by the fact that the ship is a solid object. When you attach the string to two different spaceships, the string will experience a tension due to the two spaceships not accelerating at the same rate in their frames, meaning that the two ends of the string will accelerate at different rates, stretching the string. In the external inertial frame, where the two accelerations are the same, the tension is intead caused by the string contracting. If the two spaceships were correcting their thrust so that they always accelerate at the same rate in the moving frame, then the string would not snap and the inertial observer would see the string contracting while the two ships will be getting closer to each other to not break the string.

  • @eklhaft4531

    @eklhaft4531

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jeffwells641 It's not the problem. The acceleration being the same in the inertial refference frame is the problem. If an object contracts progressively more and more then the front and back of it don't accelerate at the same rate. The observer accelerating with the object won't see any contraction but the inertial one does. If you have two identical rockets they should have the same acceleration for the co moving observer not for the inertial observer.

  • @skeltek7487
    @skeltek7487 Жыл бұрын

    I remember explaining this to people on my forum many years ago. Essentially it is a shift of the plane of simultaneousness during acceleration.

  • @3obby

    @3obby

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm having trouble understanding this, why wouldn't any shift in space/time apply to every part of the accelerating body? I mean, it is all the same accelerating body, right? There should be no difference in behaviour between the string between the ships or any part of the ships.

  • @skeltek7487

    @skeltek7487

    Жыл бұрын

    @@3obby Accelerating and changing velocity changes the metric of the object or observer in comparison to everything else in the universe. It is like tilting the accelerated observer into one direction. One may imagine it as being an angle being orthogonal when standing still and being tilted in a direction when moving relatively. While from the observers view things happening at his front and back may be simultaneous, another relatvively moved person would consider them not happening at the same time. Is is similar to having two rockets start accelerating simultaneously with one of them being 1km in front of the other. From the perspective of a non-moving observer, their distances would remain the same, but from the perspective of the front rocket, the other rocket would have lower acceleration lagging behind(and increasing the distance). If they both start decelerating after a preset time of 1 minute, the front rocket would think the other having reached their max speed later and then decelerating faster. Such phenomena also apply within the same rocket.

  • @3obby

    @3obby

    Жыл бұрын

    @@skeltek7487 but wouldn't that orthogonal angle be exactly the same between both bodies? If the two bodies start at a set distance apart, simultaneously accelerate, then simultaneously decelerate, their frame of reference for each other was fixed independent of the surrounding spacetime.

  • @skeltek7487

    @skeltek7487

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@3obby Their distance would stay the same in the eyes of a non-accelerated observer. From their own viewpoints though, that distance experiences a lorenz-contraction. Imagine an observer, who was already moving at the rockets maximum speed when they were still standing still: From that observers view, the rockets did not start simultaneously. From the very beginning, he was in the rockets final (accelerated) frame of reference. That is the frame of reference the rockets will arrive after the acceleration phase is finished. By accelerating, distances change (contraction or lengthening) and so does the plane of what is perceived simultaneous. There is another example, where rockets fly parallel: Before starting, they see each other next to each other (looking left and right 90° angle from flight direction). When they start accelerating, they will see each other slightly in front (89° for example), since the light travels a curve from their perspective and hits their eyes slightly from direction of travel. Accelerating shifts the angles and distances of the whole universe towards the direction of travel - or from a non-accelerated observers viewpoint: The universe stays the same while the accelerated object experiences being warped.

  • @3obby

    @3obby

    Жыл бұрын

    @@skeltek7487 in your example of the two rockets beside each other, wouldn't they each seem to view themselves as slightly ahead, as the spacetime between them expands? Even though this is happening, the spacetime distortion is proportional to the speed, and I don't think that impacts matter that would be strung between the two crafts. The spacetime should simply become thinner, stretched out, right?

  • @hughshaw6109
    @hughshaw6109 Жыл бұрын

    So, all the great explanations about space-time, and what catches my eye? The fact that the closed captions at 4:30 read "Besides, this is the Asylum."

  • @WernerBeroux
    @WernerBeroux Жыл бұрын

    7:56 Now I finally understand why I always feel the bicycle in front of me seems to go faster than me.

  • @adamreynolds3863
    @adamreynolds3863 Жыл бұрын

    if the metal rod was as strong as the ships, would the two ships be considered one ship? and would that ship break apart? why would only the string or rod break and not the material that makes up the ships? i would argue that each ship is a mini "ship-string-ship" entity.

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    8:43

  • @olmostgudinaf8100

    @olmostgudinaf8100

    Жыл бұрын

    Conversely, wouldn't the entire system with the string be considered one big ship, no matter how thin the string is, including a string of zero thickness (also known as empty space)?

  • @lamcho00

    @lamcho00

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes if the rod is strong enough, then it can be considered as single object. But your question was answered in the video. It would be like watching just one of the ships. The stationary observer would see the length of the rod and the ships contracting.

  • @fewwiggle

    @fewwiggle

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum I believe that AR is asking what does it mean when the ships become one ship, IOW, what (if anything) is happening or trying to happen to the integrity of the spaceship?

  • @Blox117

    @Blox117

    Жыл бұрын

    because the string is weaker duh

  • @thegwangster9097
    @thegwangster9097 Жыл бұрын

    I see. I guess this illuminates the fact that acceleration at relativistic speeds stresses an object, due to each part of the object existing in a different momentary inertial reference frames from each other. In order for the object to stay together at all, it’ll have to be strong enough hold together, otherwise it’ll break just like the weak string.

  • @levyroth

    @levyroth

    Жыл бұрын

    Duh, that's why ships in Star Trek had a magnetic bubble around them to allow them to go at warp speeds.

  • @darkracer1252

    @darkracer1252

    Жыл бұрын

    no this illuminates the fact that this guy has no fucking clue what he is talking about and shouldn't be allowed to post vids about science.

  • @paulbennett7021
    @paulbennett7021 Жыл бұрын

    This is so amazingly well explained that even I can understand it!

  • @homersenemy7105

    @homersenemy7105

    Жыл бұрын

    Did you?

  • @frederikkargaard1919
    @frederikkargaard1919 Жыл бұрын

    This was such a great video to see and it directs our focus to the exact problem, most of us have with "Relativity" - that it requires a "relation", which much be defined as well, to complete an "observation"... "Speed" is an attribute provided by the "observer" - which is why we need a common point of reference ("speed of light") to align our different perspectives... That's because "time" (and thus the length of a "second") is defined by "rotation" - and the farther you are from the center of rotation, the "faster" time will have to move ("time-dilation")... This is a great example - and a great reprensentation of the issue involved... Your effort and insight amazes me...

  • @frederikkargaard1919

    @frederikkargaard1919

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem with comparing "observations" over "time" is, that (opposite to "time") any "observation" is "linear"... Time is "analog" like a "sine-wave" - an observation is "digitally" fixed in "spacetime", with a need of "connecting the dots" to become "spheric/circular"... One is a " sensed experience" - the other is "rational interpretation"...

  • @frederikkargaard1919

    @frederikkargaard1919

    Жыл бұрын

    I can't help elaborating on that... :-) "Rotation" defines an axis of rotation, defining "up/down" through "drirection" of totattion (CW/CCW)... "Perspective" is the "Path of Least Resistance" from the "observer" to the "observed"... EVERYTHING (including the observer, unless to himself) rotates relative to something else, and the axis of rotation defines a "front, back, left and right" stretching out at the plane of inertia, like "longitude" - while "lattitude" defines "distance/volume"... The longer the "distance" from the observer, the larger the radius of the "movement" of the "observed", and thus the larger "speed" in "movement"... But to align THAT experience with eachother, we need to digitalize the possible values of the observation - like when you send an analog "wave" through a flat screen with two slits - where you create an interference-pattern with digital opportunities for overlapping individual perspectives... And to do THAT, we need a common point of reference - and by choosing the "Northpole", we unite in direction of rotation, creating a united "down" around a "sphere", from the center of which "time" stretches... And if the crust of the Earth didn't restrict us from "falling", we'd soon join the same "space" in a short amount of "time", with the "speed of acceleration" from whatever perspective, we experience individually (at the crust)... Observing a magnet under a "ferro-cell", discloses a digital inteferencepattern of a "torus" with it's predefined axis of rotation and expected direction in rotation, if provided with "energy" - llike "movement" in "space" (which equals movement in "time")... Like a predefined "perspective" with a pre-defined "direction" in "time"... And when we "move" a magnet in "time", the plane of inertia creates a digital pattern of common points of reference, with "energy" we can harvest to create "mass" (by restricting it with our perspective - known as "c squared")... The "Moire-effect" in 3D, is the individually sensed observation of a "magnet-field"... "Theory of Relativity" and "Quantum Mechanics" are the 2 extremes of THAT spectrum - dependent of the perspective of the observer... And a "dreamcatcher" can inspire a LOT of thinking... ;-)

  • @lamcho00
    @lamcho00 Жыл бұрын

    This was a good one. My intuition really makes me think classically (Newtonian mechanics) and my first thought was the string won't snap. But after a while I came to the conclusion, if an object accelerating to relativistic speeds undergoes length contraction, if we are not seeing both spaceships coming closer to each other, then it means one of them accelerated first or is accelerating at a higher rate. So the string should definitely snap. If the string does not snap, then the stationary observer should see the string contract in length, like it's a stretched rubber band pulling both spacecraft closer as they accelerate.

  • @DavidPysnik
    @DavidPysnik Жыл бұрын

    This brought up an interesting question for me: When you observe length contraction, from where does the contraction take place? The object is going to shrink toward a line perpendicular to the direction of motion, but is that line located in the middle of the object, the front, the back, or elsewhere? Wherever it is, why is it there and not somewhere else? This mattered for me in the problem as the separate items (each ship and the rope) would distort differently if they were separate items that shrunk toward their own centers (or fronts, or backs, or elsewhere) than if they were one item with a common center they would shrink towards. This seems to reflect acceleration causing internal stresses on the items which would lead the rope to break, but could then break other things if the item is not built to handle the acceleration.

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    It depends on the constraints your are putting on your experiment. If you want that the inertial observer will keep on seeing the same separation between the ships (let's say they have to accelerate at the same rate and start at the same moment in the inertial frame), then they shrink separately around each own center of mass. It could not be any other way, because we are requiring them to accelerate at the same rate in that frame and start at the same moment from zero velocity. Their distance in the ships' frames will not be constant though (will be increasing, as shown in the video). If instead we require that they maintain the same distance in their own frames, then they will appear to get closer to each other in the inertial frame, which would look like a contraction around a middle point between the ships.

  • @torgeirtheodorsen1301

    @torgeirtheodorsen1301

    Жыл бұрын

    This is caused by the time light from this object takes to get to you. it only Looks like they are futher apart and so on. due to how an observer viewes the light comming from them. There is no actual change to the object in Question. Only how it looks to be for the observer.

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@torgeirtheodorsen1301 that is not correct. Length contraction does reduce the real length of an object, as measured in a certain frame of reference. If it were only an optical illusion, muons generated by cosmic rays wouldn't reach the earth, electromagnetism wouldn't work (a magnetic field generated by a current in a wire can turn into an electric field in a different frame of reference because of length contraction on the metal's lattice), just to name a few.

  • @newtypealpha

    @newtypealpha

    Жыл бұрын

    From nowhere. It's not the objects that contract, it's the literal value of all measurable lengths. Wavelengths are shorter, rulers are shorter, atoms are shorter. A perfect sphere appears to be an ellipse, etc. Not only would the spacecraft appear shorter but the distances between them also shortens. The effect appears instantly for every single object at that velocity.

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@newtypealpha the distance between them in the in inertial frame cannot reduce if we define that they have the same acceleration and they start from the same velocity at the same moment in the inertial frame. Did you watch the video? If the distance between them was reducing, it would mean that the string would not snap, and they would not have the same distance in the external observer rest frame. It would be as you said only if the setup of the experiment was that the two spaceships have to maintain the same distance in their own frame, which would imply they would not have the same distance in the external rest frame, so the distance between them would contract (i.e. they would move closer to eachother at the same rate as the string contracts).

  • @TerryBollinger
    @TerryBollinger Жыл бұрын

    Nick Lucid, thank you. Your presentation and various comments reminded me of the value of the momentum-pair model of Lorentz transformations: A and B at rest explode into A-left, A-right, B-left, and B-right, all moving at 99.5% lightspeed. Since the A and B mass centers stay unchanged, A-right and B-right launch from the original A and B locations - no Lorentz contraction. A-right and B-right, however, both abruptly see themselves 10 times farther apart due to their rulers getting Lorentz-squished. Nice! 2022-07-21.17.04 EDT

  • @williamdowling7718
    @williamdowling7718 Жыл бұрын

    The 2 ships and the string can be thought of as one "observer" or reference frame. It wouldn't make sense that the two ships would contract at their center of mass independently of string that is moving equally as fast. All 3 bodies together should experience the same contraction together, not each individually. The whole "system" of the ships and string are moving together..

  • @KungKras
    @KungKras Жыл бұрын

    What if the string is considered as being part of both spaceships? Or if you accelerate a long spaceship with the same length as the string? Why are the two spaceships and the string not considered the same system and contract as one single block? EDIT: Extra question, what implications does this have for objects that are longer than a planck length?

  • @javiej

    @javiej

    Жыл бұрын

    it is explained in the video, if it is strong enough then the front ship is towing the back ship and they act as single object (no snap)

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    If the ships operate under their own thrust, then they act independently. You can't treat them as one object, even though they're connected by the string.

  • @judgeomega

    @judgeomega

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum so any ship with multiple thrusters needs to be considered multiple ships?

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    @@judgeomega In that case, I could imagine an acceleration that would tear that ship to pieces. Technically, yes, you should treat the one ship as multiple objects... but whether or not you could get away with still treating it as one ship would depend on the material properties of the ship (and where the thrusters are located).

  • @judgeomega

    @judgeomega

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum so for the very same reason the string would snap, any ship without just a point source engine would also snap. this seems like this is important information. if the string would snap there would be no ships left, right?

  • @SaniFakhouri
    @SaniFakhouri Жыл бұрын

    Here's an interesting question. Assuming a similar setup, and assuming the string between the ships is extremely fragile to the smallest of tensions, is there any situation of rocket accelerations (aside from the obvious a_A = a_B = 0 m/s^2) that results in the the string not snapping at all?

  • @erumaaro6060

    @erumaaro6060

    Жыл бұрын

    I think so, if the difference in acceleration counterbalances the speed at which the distance changes due to length contraction. We know that length contract to 0 at the speed of light, so the two curves in the space-time diagram (from clone C's perspective!) must touch at infinity (both time and space) (=>asymptotic), meaning the front rocket must accelerate slower than the back, and acceleration cannot be constant for both, unless the distance is zero. So the difference in acceleration needed is a function of time (#canOfWorms) and the initial length of the string.

  • @AlexBesogonov

    @AlexBesogonov

    Жыл бұрын

    Not with constant acceleration. If ships can change the acceleration, then yes.

  • @jameelarosetafoya2058

    @jameelarosetafoya2058

    Жыл бұрын

    NO

  • @lamcho00

    @lamcho00

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes if both rockets accelerate at the same time in their frame of reference. Then the stationary observer would see the string contract in length and the rockets come closer to each other. It would be the same as accelerating a metal rod to relativistic speeds (or just one of the rockets). Length contraction will be observed, because light (and information in general) travel at the speed of light until it reaches the stationary observer. Even at the speed of light it takes time for light to reach the observer.

  • @mitymi

    @mitymi

    Жыл бұрын

    Good question. I'd like to see the plots of that in comparison. I think it would make it more clear that the setup of the problem is from the 3rd person perspective. Maybe even add 4th moving observer to really drive home the different cases...

  • @tylerhamlin166
    @tylerhamlin16610 ай бұрын

    Nice VFR sectional bookmark! It’s rare to see pilots show such restraint ;)

  • @ManyHeavens42
    @ManyHeavens42 Жыл бұрын

    I noticed throughout history These debates have done one thing slowed progress down, even to a Holt,Everytime, a closed mind" should mean close the door on your way out 👁️

  • @enomoto-kudamono
    @enomoto-kudamono Жыл бұрын

    The video caused me to raise some questions: Will the spaceship break apart eventually during the acceleration? Or will the spaceships break apart in pieces of one atom thick slices if the EM force between atoms assumed to be infinitive weak?

  • @Bela12351

    @Bela12351

    Жыл бұрын

    I have the same question. After this video I assume that the rocket breaks apart as well.

  • @brothermine2292

    @brothermine2292

    Жыл бұрын

    Nick answered this question when he discussed what would happen if the string is strong enough not to snap or is replaced by a metal rod. Spaceships don't break apart from the Lorentz contraction because spaceships are strong enough not to snap.

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    Whether or not your ship would survive would depend on the structural/material properties of the ship, where the thrusters are located, and how large the acceleration is.

  • @brothermine2292

    @brothermine2292

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum : The temperature of the spaceship's o-rings could also affect whether it would survive.

  • @abrahamvivas9540

    @abrahamvivas9540

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum the real question is: the ship is at tension or at compression?. Every point in the ship drift away as in the non-inertial frame looks like for the rope... ergo the ship is in tension. Or the engines pushes the structure and the ship is in compression?

  • @banderzwierz
    @banderzwierz Жыл бұрын

    So the rocket itself also feels the stretching force on every part of it as it accelerates? Fascinating. Interesting conclusion: If we want the string to never snap the rocket behind should accelerate faster?

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, the rocket in the back would have to accelerate faster enough so that (in Charles' frame) the distance between the ships shrinks by the exact amount predicted by length contraction.

  • @davidwuhrer6704

    @davidwuhrer6704

    Жыл бұрын

    No, the one in front should accelerate slower.

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    @@davidwuhrer6704 Sure, that works too.

  • @banderzwierz

    @banderzwierz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum That's amazing. Universe is a magical place. Thanks!

  • @marcello234
    @marcello234 Жыл бұрын

    "The string can't be both broken & unbroken at the same time". I asked Schrodinger & he said yes it can.

  • @axelperezmachado3500
    @axelperezmachado3500 Жыл бұрын

    not gonna lie at 8:41 I genuinely thought that both clones broke character. Took me like 2 seconds to realize that didn't made sense and it was hilarious.

  • @olmostgudinaf8100
    @olmostgudinaf8100 Жыл бұрын

    But wait, Charles can see a _single system,_ consisting of two spaceships and a string. The _entire system_ is accelerating as a unit, therefore the length contraction applies to the _entire system,_ including the string. So it does not snap.

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    The ships have their own thrust and the string is too weak to affect anything, so they act independently. They can't be one object.

  • @olmostgudinaf8100

    @olmostgudinaf8100

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum Not physically. But they move as one object, so to the outside, or even inside, observer, they _appear_ as one.

  • @thedeemon
    @thedeemon Жыл бұрын

    Love those "visual approximations" of scientists! Great episode, although how exactly length contraction leads to rope snapping may still raise questions. ("is rope's length reduced or is it the distance between ships reduced? then the rope may get too long for it instead of snapping...")

  • @deathpyre
    @deathpyre Жыл бұрын

    I feel like you could say that the STRING also has a different frame of reference. The string itself will have a frame of reference spanning the two ships, which will also change the size of the string along the length, maybe making it staying connected

  • @Martin-kn1cn

    @Martin-kn1cn

    7 ай бұрын

    I don’t think you can say that the string has its own frame of reference here, because it has no propulsion of its own which is important here

  • @bluestarwars
    @bluestarwars Жыл бұрын

    Interesting. My thought was that the string itself undergoes length contraction, so if (to Charles) distance between spaceships is constant, sting snaps due to contracting … Consider this: in the final example, the string is replaced by a strong enough bar to make the chips a single object - that object, bar included,used will length contract for Charles. By extension, so it will as we make it weaker and weaker. Ignoring the spaceships, we have a string that accelerates at near C speeds - and a stationary observers will see it contract.

  • @KeirRice
    @KeirRice Жыл бұрын

    I would like to hear more about joining the ships with different materials. Where is the boundy between two ships with independently length contraction and one big ship that contracts as a single unit?

  • @michaelcherokee8906

    @michaelcherokee8906

    Жыл бұрын

    I was wondering that myself.

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    The deciding factor is the strength of the material. In their frames, the ships will have different accelerations, so the two sides of the rope will have different acceleration, thus the rope will experience tension. If the material is not strong enough to sustain that tension, then the rope will snap. If the material is strong enough, then the rope will exert a force on the two ships so that their acceleration (and their distance) is forced to stay constant in their frame of reference. If their distance is constant in the ships reference, then it cannot be constant in the external observer reference. The external observer will see the rope pulling the spaceships closer to eachother by contracting, so in his reference the ships will not have the same acceleration. In all the frames the tension of the rope is the same, but the "explaination" for that tension is different.

  • @darkracer1252

    @darkracer1252

    Жыл бұрын

    nowhere. there could be nothing in between them and they would still be concidered one single "object" or better said. one single frame of reffrence.

  • @darkracer1252

    @darkracer1252

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Manuel-cx6ob their frames? I FUCKING HATE THE DUNNING CRUGER EFFECT

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darkracer1252 what do you mean? "Their frames" -> "Their reference frames" Do you think they don't have reference frames? :D

  • @thenasadude6878
    @thenasadude6878 Жыл бұрын

    I've seen other youtubers, including heavyweights, trying this one. It's the first time I've seen a compelling and complete explanation. Well done! Please don't overuse stock footage, it becomes distracting if there are too many cuts or if it's too generic. After all, your videos are mini lectures, you are the main asset, all the rest is support material. Thanks!

  • @aidenmartin6674
    @aidenmartin6674 Жыл бұрын

    Another video was discussing length contraction. Its argument was that the items appeared to contract because they are “turning away” from us on the time axis. Since time is a direction also when objects travel faster on the time axis they are traveling less on an xy axis. This traveling less on xy and more on time makes the object rotate away from us on the time axis. (For example if something goes past you on a straight line (x axis) you can see its whole length but if it turns away from you (more towards the y axis) it looks shorter). This would mean that the contraction is an illusion, it doesn’t actually contract it is just “turning sideways” to an observer and the distance between the 2 objects here doesn’t actually change.

  • @kilroy987
    @kilroy987 Жыл бұрын

    3:30 in and my basic observation is: Tying two bricks together with string doesn't magically make an object with bigger mass that falls faster, hence the two bricks both fall at the same speed, due to the laws of gravity. So tying two ships together essentially makes them one structure, and as they travel all three visually contract - the ships and the string. But we shouldn't assume that the ships contract relative to their center of mass, nor should we assume that what constitutes a visual contraction also implies an actual change in position. So should two ships tied together be a long string characteristically contract in a very different way than two ships not tied together? I would say no, just like the two falling bricks tied together by string. So, there should be a way to represent how the visual contraction occurs without forcing the string to break. My main issue is if the string is forced to break, then the ships themselves should also suffer some severe structural damage (just change the string to a metal rod, making them more a singular solid structure). If there is no way for the string not to snap, then there is no way for the ships to contract without causing damage to themselves. You can't just decide that a solid beam connecting the two ships makes them such a solid structure that there is no danger of damaging contraction, and then turn around and say that a string must snap. At what magical point between the beam getting thinner and softer and the string getting thicker and harder do they meet at the point where contraction does and does not become damaging? I'd say there isn't one. It's all one or the other. The string doesn't snap and it's safe to travel at high speeds, or the string snaps and ships that travel at high speeds are destined to suffer internal damage.

  • @gaberowe2
    @gaberowe2 Жыл бұрын

    Great video - i think an additional conclusion might be that while the Charles frame would be able to justify that the string breaks due to length contraction - which would be visible during both the acceleration and the constant velocity phase, the string would not break during the constant velocity phase for the moving rockets, but would during the accelerating phase (I think?).. so a 1km long string would break during the accelerating phase but a 1km long string would not break if strung between the two rockets after reaching a constant velocity

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    If the velocity were constant, then the length contraction is whatever it is. It won't increase. In that case, the question is "Can the string survive being stretched that specific amount?" If the rockets continuously accelerate, then it's likely you'll reach a "too much stretch" point.

  • @givrally7634
    @givrally7634 Жыл бұрын

    New question : If, in both moving frames of reference, Bernard is lagging behind, couldn't we design an experiment in which Bernard doesn't have the same acceleration rate, but instead the acceleration needed to make the distance stay the same in Albert's point of view ?

  • @ooloncolluphid9975

    @ooloncolluphid9975

    Жыл бұрын

    excellent question! the string should still snap (since Charlie will observe the distance between the ships increases), but now Arthur and Bernard do not have an explanation for why it snapped.

  • @narfwhals7843

    @narfwhals7843

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ooloncolluphid9975 This is not accurate. If Bernard accelerates in such a way as to keep the distance constant in the rockets frames of reference then Charles sees that distance shrink just as the string contracts. The string remains taut and unbroken for all observers. Charles will now, however, not see the ships accelerate equally.

  • @BartvandenDonk

    @BartvandenDonk

    Жыл бұрын

    @@narfwhals7843 The string will always snap. It is like the bang while using a wip. Or like stretching when getting near a black hole 🕳️. The forces are so immense and different behind the first rocket and in front of the second rocket. The rope will change and get the shape like a wip and break.

  • @BartvandenDonk

    @BartvandenDonk

    Жыл бұрын

    The acceleration itself should accelerate. This is (aside that reaching speed of light is impossible) completely out of reach.

  • @BartvandenDonk

    @BartvandenDonk

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ooloncolluphid9975 Charlie is not important here. 😏

  • @brighampope205
    @brighampope205 Жыл бұрын

    I love your videos! Thank you for making them. I've always had a question about relativity, and how it addresses the doppler affect. We learn about the motion of stars from their doppler shift, but relativity says that the speed of light is the same for every frame of reference. So no matter how fast the source is moving, or how fast I am moving, shouldn't the light travel at the same speed with the same energy from the reference frame of my eyes? Why then does the wavelength change depending on the reference frame?

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    The Doppler effect with light is actually a relativistic effect. Relativity _predicts_ it. As you've said, light speed is the same for all observers, so it can't change speed.... but there's still a relative speed between the source of the light and the observer. Light might have the same speed of everyone, but it won't have the same _energy_ from everyone's perspective. Energy is relative to the observer.

  • @MrMessageWriter
    @MrMessageWriter Жыл бұрын

    So when I watched this, I remembered other videos of yours I had done the math along with you, over the past years. So when described, I knew it had to snap, and had the answer 30 seconds after you stated the problem. Damn traveling through space long distances is going to be difficult or very weird. Especially if there are more then one ship traveling together.

  • @jasonremy1627
    @jasonremy1627 Жыл бұрын

    Under what conditions would the string not break? That is, how would each ship need to accelerate so that in all reference frames, the string remains taut but unbroken?

  • @apirx

    @apirx

    Жыл бұрын

    The front rocket would have to accelerate slower than the rear one.

  • @jasonremy1627

    @jasonremy1627

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, but how much slower? What's the relationship?

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jasonremy1627 the distance between the two spaceships if they didn't have a rope connecting them would be the initial distance D multiplied by the lorentz factor: d = D (1/sqrt(1-v2/c2)) If you find the rate of change of the rate of change of this distance, that would be the acceleration that the ends of the string would be subjected to. Then if you know the masses of the ships, you can compute the tension on the string, to know when it will break.

  • @yoshtg
    @yoshtg Жыл бұрын

    there is no paradox. this video shows what happens when physicists spend to much time in theoretical physics. what we are asking is: "if an object contracts due to length contraction, will it cause stress to the ships fuselage?" thats what we are asking here because the line itself gets accelerated, too making both ships technically 1 ship with a very weak fuselage

  • @bierrollerful

    @bierrollerful

    Жыл бұрын

    The paradox arises from having *two* objects accelerating independently. We _falsely_ (hence the paradox) assume that a) because they are connected by a string and b) because they are accelerating at the same time & rate, that we can treat them as one object, and so we expect the string to not snap in the rockets' frame of reference. However, in their frame of reference, the rockets do _not_ accelerate at the same time & rate: the string then snaps as the distance between the rockets does not remain constant, resolving the paradox. Edit: Maybe it helps to think that the paradox isn't about the string, but rather about preserving distance between the rockets. The inertial observer sees the rockets contract, so the space and therefore the distance between them must be become "bigger" - whereas the accelerating rockets do not observe any contraction, so the distance should remain constant.

  • @hillarysemails1615

    @hillarysemails1615

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bierrollerful I agree with the 1st guy. If the string breaks, then the rockets must shatter into billions of pieces as they too are collections of many parts and also must undergo the acceleration stresses. The nose and the tail must be considered as separate Frames from the Observer.

  • @erhard_gesagt

    @erhard_gesagt

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree. And thx for not being alone. In fact I immediately saw why the strings break in the view of the space ships, but it wasn’t clear to me why it would break in the perspective of the observe. I’ve thought all behaves like one single object. I can now understand that it breaks if it really cannot stand any stress. For the space ships it is assumed, of course, that they can stand the stress.

  • @erhard_gesagt

    @erhard_gesagt

    Жыл бұрын

    Yet I wonder whether this is due to length contraction. Let’s assume it can stand some stress. Just that it survives the start. Will it break later? Will there be more stress? Observers perspective: ships are closer to each other, rope is shorter. However, as they move, they cannot maintain a path such that both ships are equidistant to the observe, which is crucial to this problem

  • @aniksamiurrahman6365

    @aniksamiurrahman6365

    Жыл бұрын

    Imagine a college professor torturing students with this.

  • @kendrickmcelfish2805
    @kendrickmcelfish2805 Жыл бұрын

    This didn't go as I was expecting, but it made plenty of sense. I was very suspicious when you said the rockets accelerated "at the same time." Because I have been exposed to these relativity paradoxes before, I was expecting the observers to disagree about the order of the events. Also, how strong is the pull due to the space stretching? Like how tough of a string do we need here?

  • @misteratoz
    @misteratoz2 ай бұрын

    I lost you when you said that the rockets ships see each other accelerate at different speeds despite being the same speed.

  • @shawng4896
    @shawng4896 Жыл бұрын

    I don’t understand how the unbreakable rod connecting the ships changes things. If the rear ship is being towed it is still accelerating at the same rate as the forward ship, just the force causing the acceleration has changed. Fundamentally what does it mean for the 2 ships to be “no longer operating independently?” If the 2 ships were on a giant space barge everything else stays the same, and the space barge started accelerating would the string snap?

  • @omargoodman2999

    @omargoodman2999

    Жыл бұрын

    The string isn't a physical string; it is a metaphor for relative distance between the two ships or, more abstractly, two discrete points. Think of it as one of those math problems where you assume friction and wind resistance aren't real and cows are spheres and mass doesn't matter. Even in the context of a single rocket accelerating, there will be internal stresses on the materials; rockets aren't made of solid "rocket", they're made of mechanically connected parts which are made of bonded molecules and atoms. For the sake of simplicity, we consider it as being a single lump of solid, contiguous "rocketanium" and internal stresses be damned. Likewise, the "string" is an abstract representation for how, for each accelerating ship, their acceleration will appear different, thus the distance between the two changes, but for the stationary observer the distance remains the same and it's the lengths of the ships that change. If there were a single long rocket with propulsion near the front, again made of solid "rocketanium" so we can disregard internal stress, then what happens depends on the specific properties of "rocketanium". If it is cohesive enough to overcome even relativistic effects and allow the entire rocket, front to back, to move at a consistent acceleration as observed by a passenger, then a stationary external observer would actually see the back moving *faster* to catch up with with the front. In other words, it would be impossible for the front and back end of the ship to appear to accelerate at the same rate *because* the entire ship is contracting in length as a single unit; just the "contraction" is a result of the back apparantly accelerating faster than the front. Of course, this would require "rocketanium" to be able to allow all points along the length of the rocket to accelerate simultaneously relative to one another which would require violating causality as force would have to propogate at infinite speed. On the other hand, if "rocketanium" *can't* keep the ship in pace with itself, then a passenger riding at the front of the rocket would see the entire thing stretch out as the back end lags gradually behind the front end. If there were also a string woven of Metaphex fibers, a synthetic polymer made of pure metaphor, stretched between any two points along the length of the rocket (behind the pointnof propulsion), then the string would break at some arbitrary point because of the lengthening of the rocket. And, for an outside observer, they would also see the rocket stretch out and the string snap because the front end actually appeared to have started moving before the back end would have due to differences in light/causality propogation. A fundamental issue with the setup of the model is the assumption that an external observer is even *capable* of seeing both ships start accelerating simultaneously. If the observer sees this, then it means that the further-away ship actually started accelerating first and it just took time for the light to reach the observer, meaning *of course the string snaps.* But if the launch were carefully timed in such a way that they actually *did* start moving at the same moment, the external observer would not observe this; he would first observe the closer ship start moving, followed by the further ship start moving. Thus, there is never any breaking tension in the string in the first place. But if the further ship started moving first, the tension would propagate through the string at the speed of causality (c) and, for the sake of example, let's say it snaps exactly in the middle. The observer would first see a ripple of tension start at the closer ship and propagate up the string towards the farther ship. Then, the string would snap in the middle. Last, the two ships would *appear* to launch at the same time, just as the tension ripple finally appears to reach the further ship.

  • @EpicMathTime

    @EpicMathTime

    Жыл бұрын

    The ships are accelerating at the same rate in the wrong reference frame. It isn't moving like a single ship.

  • @brunocardin4935

    @brunocardin4935

    Жыл бұрын

    There's an extra force if there's a rod

  • @david_porthouse
    @david_porthouse Жыл бұрын

    When you do your analysis of the elastic string, you need to adopt a framework where all parts of the string have the same time co-ordinate. A line of constant time will be rotating as the rockets accelerate. It’s only a paradox if you don’t know that.

  • @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958

    @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958

    Жыл бұрын

    The rotation part is subtle. I don't think anyone got that part except you.

  • @andrewbreding593
    @andrewbreding593 Жыл бұрын

    8:38 I've waited 17 years to hear someone say that one again

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    😂

  • @DMSG1981
    @DMSG1981 Жыл бұрын

    The "Visual Approximations" cracked me up. Thumb up for that alone...

  • @ghost9199
    @ghost9199 Жыл бұрын

    I love how you make logical sense out of relativity. So many people think it's a mystical thing but it's not and your graphs show it. I love your videos 👍

  • @josealaridcons5540
    @josealaridcons5540 Жыл бұрын

    what about, inside one ship you have a piece of string connected to two pipes within the ship no need for another ship if that ship starts accelerating, will the string snap or loosen? because I saw in the video that the ship as a whole contracts, while the space between ships would increment. So I ask now what happens within one ship?

  • @snowthemegaabsol6819

    @snowthemegaabsol6819

    Жыл бұрын

    Inside the ship, the string remains intact

  • @darkracer1252

    @darkracer1252

    Жыл бұрын

    the space between the ship also contracts. because they are accelerating at the exact same acceleration they can be treated as a single object (along with the string and the space in between them)

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darkracer1252 they only have the same acceleration from the point of view of the external observer. In special relativity, three-acceleration is relative and not necessarily the same as proper acceleration.

  • @darkracer1252

    @darkracer1252

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Manuel-cx6ob no he said they had the same acceleration. he said nothing about it being the same acceleration from an outside perspective. the distance between the 2 ships would ****SEEM**** to shrink along with the string. that is what would happen. nothing else. (well the string would burn from the rocket exhaust but that's not part of the thaught experiment)

  • @Manuel-cx6ob

    @Manuel-cx6ob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darkracer1252 he said that they have the same acceleration when they start (and they are at rest with the external observer). And he said that they stay at the same distance in the external observer's frame (which is at rest with the frame where the ships started from). As they accelerate, they cannot possibly mantain the same distance, if we define that they have to maintain the same distance in the external reference. To keep the same distance, they would have to tweak their engines to adjust their relative acceleration (or be connected by a strong string that pulls them together), to account for the fact that they did not start at the same time in their current instantaneously comoving inertial frames.

  • @shaunmodipane1
    @shaunmodipane1 Жыл бұрын

    That is the best part of special relativity that different rules cause the same events.

  • @christopherkarr1872
    @christopherkarr1872 Жыл бұрын

    As others have stated, the shrinking of the ships follows the time-contraction and absolves the 'ships different length, string must break' idea. The contraction of the system is uniform, and it remains the same from a spacetime reference frame.

  • @huepix
    @huepix Жыл бұрын

    But wouldn't the space between the rockets contract? I mean, the two ships and the string are all part of the same "space" arent they? Does this mean that at a certain length, rockets will split in half, then quarters eights etc as the get closer to SOL?

  • @ralphwishart

    @ralphwishart

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely! The rope wouldn't snap at all just like in the similar example of a stationary observer watching a train accelerate by. the train will contract but the wagons will never come apart. if both objects accelerates in unison, it must be regarded as a system and not as individual bodies with discreet paths the space-time lines will be equivalent.

  • @Frankly7

    @Frankly7

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ralphwishart The train scenario is not the same. The links are not fragile like the string is between the rockets, and so the train is strong enough to stay together. The problem is that you are treating the accelerating objects and the space around them as the same thing, when I fact what they do is completely opposite to each other. Any section of train will contract relative to the space around it (i.e. space expands), and any section of space will contract relative to the train (i.e. the train expands). The only reason the parts stay together is because they are strong enough to do so, which is exactly the reason why the spaceship paradox here uses a fragile string, so that we can ask what happens when the accelerating matter does in fact break apart.

  • @Frankly7

    @Frankly7

    Жыл бұрын

    The space doesn't contract, the matter within it does. See my above comment.

  • @olmostgudinaf8100

    @olmostgudinaf8100

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Frankly7 I disagree. Relativistic equations do not care about _what_ moves, only how fast. An empty space contracts too, if it moves fast enough relative to the observer - or vice versa. There is even a well known example: a photon moves through empty space at speed of light. From the photon's perspective, space and time contract to zero length. The photon observes leaving the star an reaching your retina millions of light years away as one event that happens at the same time and place.

  • @Frankly7

    @Frankly7

    Жыл бұрын

    @@olmostgudinaf8100 So I messed up the example in my explanation originally but it's edited now, and my point still stands. The problem is you are in fact the one treating the object as a discrete whole, whereas I'm pointing out that it's a collection of continuous matter. Any section of matter you take will want to contract, pulling it away from the sections around it. So uniformly the matter of the train will experience outward forces parallel to the direction of acceleration. If you claim a weak rope won't snap, you are implying that the ships move toward each other in the acceleration frame, but they have no reason to do that unless they are only edges of a discrete object and not simply collections of matter that can form countless configurations of objects.

  • @jonasdaverio9369
    @jonasdaverio9369 Жыл бұрын

    In fact, the accelerating reference frame in special relativity is an exercice in Feynman's lectures, and I remember being very excited when I solved it

  • @javathezone
    @javathezone7 ай бұрын

    Very interesting video. What I never get in those kind of scenarios: is it not possible that the space between the rockets also expands due to speed an then the string would hold in all 3 reference frames? Otherwise asked. Are we not assuming that the space is only of theoretical nature for this example? It is real though; can it not also curve?

  • @TrevaQ
    @TrevaQ Жыл бұрын

    Wait, amy I really the first one in over 3000 comments to mention how awesome it is that Nick went to the effort of recording Question Clone reacting to the "cooking with gas" outtake?

  • @greatuniverse66
    @greatuniverse66 Жыл бұрын

    Great universe ☺️

  • @joeturn4130
    @joeturn4130 Жыл бұрын

    Can you take this to the next level and figure out what the acceleration differential would have to be for the sting not to snap between the two ships?

  • @eigenchris

    @eigenchris

    Жыл бұрын

    Science Asylum mentioned that an accelerating spaceship travels on a hyperbolic worldline on a spacetime diagram. You can draw a series of accelerating-ship hyperbolas on the spacetime diagram, with each one being a bit "less curved" (less accelerated) than the one behind it. You can do this in just the right way to make sure strings tied between all the ships never break. This series of hyperbolas are called "Rindler coordinates" (shown very quickly at 5:37 in the video). Wikipedia gives the equation for each of these hyperbolas with given a starting position "x": the formula is x*cosh(αt) where "α" is the acceleration of the first ship at the back. Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rindler_coordinates

  • @joeturn4130

    @joeturn4130

    Жыл бұрын

    @@eigenchris Thanks for the info, but that doesn't answer the question. Sorry to say I am not a super Mathematician who could calculate things on that level. From the video I did gather either one ship would need to travel a certain percentage faster than the other for the string not to break, or if the were to excelerate at the exact same speed one ship would need to start a certain fractional time frame before the other. Just wondering what that difference would have to be.

  • @ScienceAsylum

    @ScienceAsylum

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joeturn4130 If you know the material properties of the "string," then sure you can. How rigid is it? What's it's breaking limit? That sort of thing.

  • @ToxicityAssured

    @ToxicityAssured

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum Why don't you go do an in depth analysis of string, collecting is material properties and how rigid it is. You can then "do that sort of thing". I disagree with your conclusion and have been reading comments for an hour trying to see it your way. This one pathetic attempt and sounding smart sends me right back to thinking you tried to understand a cool topic for the views. Seriously, read his question and your reply. You sound like Pelosi being asked if she should be able to trade specific stocks.

  • @joeturn4130

    @joeturn4130

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ScienceAsylum Thanks, but I would think that there would be a solution to the problem where the material properties of the string would have no bearing. I would imagine that there would be a perfect offset with either speed, time or both where the stress on the string would be zero then the properties wouldn't matter. After that the properties of the string would only have an effect in widening those variables to give enough play to make it possible without there having to be perfection to make it happen.

  • @dragonhawkeclouse2264
    @dragonhawkeclouse2264 Жыл бұрын

    the thought of a spaceship using space-expansion just came to mind as i was watching this