geordief Posted August 30, 2022 Posted August 30, 2022 As a measure of a distance between objects does the term ,"event separation " mean exactly the same thing as "the spacetime interval"? (as the terms are commonly used) Do physical objects only exist in the framework of the events that went into making them up and changing them?
swansont Posted August 30, 2022 Posted August 30, 2022 1 hour ago, geordief said: As a measure of a distance between objects does the term ,"event separation " mean exactly the same thing as "the spacetime interval"? (as the terms are commonly used) It might. It depends on the context of how the phrase is used.
geordief Posted August 30, 2022 Author Posted August 30, 2022 16 minutes ago, swansont said: It might. It depends on the context of how the phrase is used. Well ,apart from the terms used can we say that it is meaningless to talk about the separation or distance between physical objects except in a context of a physical connection between them?** Can we even say that ,if no interaction occurs then there is no connection at all btw the objects? **(btw can we say -or define it so - that all physical objects are composed of "events"-perhaps not "events" as commonly used to mean coordinate points on a 4d spacetime diagram but as actual physical interactions)
studiot Posted August 30, 2022 Posted August 30, 2022 2 hours ago, geordief said: Do physical objects only exist in the framework of the events that went into making them up and changing them? No But they may look different to an observer in a different frame.
geordief Posted August 30, 2022 Author Posted August 30, 2022 34 minutes ago, studiot said: No But they may look different to an observer in a different frame. Are not all objects created one event at a time? And the spacetime interval (as I have learned) is independent of frame of reference. -not strictly relevant ,but might it show that the objects are composed of "events" ,the connections between which all frames can agree on?
swansont Posted August 30, 2022 Posted August 30, 2022 1 hour ago, geordief said: Well ,apart from the terms used can we say that it is meaningless to talk about the separation or distance between physical objects except in a context of a physical connection between them?** Again, there must a be a context to this - it might be meaningless under certain circumstances but not in general. 1 hour ago, geordief said: Can we even say that ,if no interaction occurs then there is no connection at all btw the objects? No. 1 hour ago, geordief said: **(btw can we say -or define it so - that all physical objects are composed of "events"-perhaps not "events" as commonly used to mean coordinate points on a 4d spacetime diagram but as actual physical interactions) No.
geordief Posted August 30, 2022 Author Posted August 30, 2022 7 minutes ago, swansont said: No (in response to myquote"Can we even say that ,if no interaction occurs then there is no connection at all btw the objects") What about 2 events ,one of which is outside the light cone of the other. Eg I cannot today have any causal effect on the life SwansontT's activities yesterday. Can I not say that there is no connection between an event in my today and your yesterday? But I can't extrapolate that to SwansontT yesterday having no connection to my today even if no interaction occurs?(is it enough that the probability of an interaction is not zero?)
swansont Posted August 30, 2022 Posted August 30, 2022 3 hours ago, geordief said: What about 2 events ,one of which is outside the light cone of the other. Eg I cannot today have any causal effect on the life SwansontT's activities yesterday. Can I not say that there is no connection between an event in my today and your yesterday? But I can't extrapolate that to SwansontT yesterday having no connection to my today even if no interaction occurs?(is it enough that the probability of an interaction is not zero?) If the two events are outside of the other's light cone, then you can say that they have no interaction, when considering that event.
geordief Posted August 30, 2022 Author Posted August 30, 2022 (edited) 47 minutes ago, swansont said: If the two events are outside of the other's light cone, then you can say that they have no interaction, when considering that event. Including any quantum effects? (Not that I can think of any) Edited August 30, 2022 by geordief
Markus Hanke Posted August 31, 2022 Posted August 31, 2022 13 hours ago, geordief said: Including any quantum effects? The relativistic formulation of quantum mechanics respects all the usual laws of SR, so there can be no physical interaction (as in: exchange of information) if the events are not within or on each other’s light cones. There can, however, be a correlation between measurements that are space-like separated, as is the case with quantum entanglement. 18 hours ago, geordief said: Can I not say that there is no connection between an event in my today and your yesterday? What swansont did yesterday can very well affect your state of affairs today - but not vice versa. So this isn’t a mutual “interaction” as such, but rather a one-way causal influence. Just be careful with the term “event” - in relativity, this term has a very specific meaning, being a point in space at a single instant in time. It doesn’t mean an occurrence with temporal extension, such as a car accident. 1
studiot Posted August 31, 2022 Posted August 31, 2022 (edited) 4 hours ago, Markus Hanke said: Just be careful with the term “event” - in relativity, this term has a very specific meaning, being a point in space at a single instant in time. It doesn’t mean an occurrence with temporal extension, such as a car accident. +1 And a single point in space, ie a single point in spacetime. So it is not just not a car crash it is also not a car. Edited August 31, 2022 by studiot
geordief Posted August 31, 2022 Author Posted August 31, 2022 1 hour ago, studiot said: +1 And a single point in space, ie a single point in spacetime. So it is not just not a car crash it is also not a car. On 8/30/2022 at 11:53 AM, geordief said: (btw can we say -or define it so - that all physical objects are composed of "events"-perhaps not "events" as commonly used to mean coordinate points on a 4d spacetime diagram but as actual physical interactions) Well ,I thought I had been observing (trying to ,anyway) the distinction insofar as my level of education allows I am very interested in "events"as physical interactions and I do not understand why it should not be possible to view physical objects as being "composed" of them.(I realize I will be as wrong as I normally am but am I any way close to how the models are to be interpreted?) Of course a physical object is composed of smaller objects but as we get to the fine (fundamental?) detail is it not possible that we are just "looking" at interactions? I have heard it said "everything is fields" Are physical objects the result of those fields (self?) interactions and do those interactions "make up" what we observe as physical objects on the macro and micro level?
studiot Posted August 31, 2022 Posted August 31, 2022 On 8/30/2022 at 10:16 AM, geordief said: As a measure of a distance between objects does the term ,"event separation " mean exactly the same thing as "the spacetime interval"? (as the terms are commonly used) Do physical objects only exist in the framework of the events that went into making them up and changing them? Your original question implied to me at any rate larger objects than 'point object', which can be truly modelled by single events. When you consider objects made up of some/many event points you can run into simultaneity issues. I think this is what Markus was referring to, but I should wait for his and swansont's comments as well.
geordief Posted August 31, 2022 Author Posted August 31, 2022 (edited) 1 hour ago, studiot said: Your original question implied to me at any rate larger objects than 'point object', which can be truly modelled by single events. Is a point object the excitation of its relevant field? And does excitation equate to "interaction " ?Do those concepts just overlap -are they distinct? (Apologies if I am shifting goalposts but they do say that the definition of madness is to keep repeating the same mistake over and over and not making different mistakes one after the other )😉 Edit:I had all kinds of physical objects in mind and assume that there must be a connection between macro and micro objects. Edited August 31, 2022 by geordief
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