- Description: Imagine two observers, one seated in the center of a speeding train
car, and another standing on the platform as the train races by. As
the center of the car passes the observer on the platform, he sees
two bolts of lightning strike the car - one on the front, and one on
the rear. The flashes of light from each strike reach him at the
same time, so he concludes that the bolts were simultaneous, since
he knows that the light from both strikes traveled the same distance
at the same speed, the speed of light. He also predicts that his
friend on the train will notice the front strike before the rear
strike, because from her perspective on the platform the train is
moving to meet the flash from the front, and moving away from the
flash from the rear.
But what does the passenger see? As her
friend on the platform predicted, the passenger does notice the
flash from the front before the flash from the rear. But her
conclusion is very different. As Einstein showed, the speed of the
flashes as measured in the reference frame of the train must also be
the speed of light. So, because each light pulse travels the same
distance from each end of the train to the passenger, and because
both pulses must move at the same speed, he can only conclude one
thing if he sees the front strike first, it actually happened
first.
Whose interpretation is correct - the observer on the
platform, who claims that the strikes happened simultaneously, or
the observer on the train, who claims that the front strike happened
before the rear strike? Einstein tells us that both are correct,
within their own frame of reference. This is a fundamental result of
special relativity From different reference frames, there can never
be agreement on the simultaneity of events.
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