• Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal

    From Ross Finlayson@ross.a.finlayson@gmail.com to sci.physics.relativity on Sun Sep 28 18:52:04 2025
    From Newsgroup: sci.physics.relativity

    On 04/21/2024 06:53 AM, Ross Finlayson wrote:
    On 04/20/2024 09:52 AM, Tom Roberts wrote:
    On 4/13/24 1:36 AM, Richard Hachel wrote:
    "If two different observers travel an identical path in equal
    observable times, then their proper times will necessarily be equal.

    Yes, of course.

    My response differs from others because I interpret your context
    differently.

    Since you mention "proper times", your context must be relativity; it
    does not matter whether SR or GR, because "travel an identical path"
    means they travel along a single worldline through spacetime -- i.e.
    they are always co-located and co-moving, so of course their elapsed
    proper times are equal (counting from any event on their worldline).

    Your "in equal observable times" is redundant. For any
    observer this directly follows from them following the
    same worldline through spacetime.

    Note this is essentially the first time I agree with Hachel. I doubt
    that he understands why what he wrote is actually correct, because he
    followed it with a bunch of obfuscatory nonsense.

    [... enormous amount of gibberish ignored.]

    Tom Roberts

    Can you help further explain for the rest of us why
    this isn't necessarily the usual interpretation or
    why it sort of doesn't arrive at the same results of
    some of the usual thought experiments like the traveling twins?



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