questionposter Posted January 7, 2012 Posted January 7, 2012 So the frequency of a photon you measure is relative, but if you know the distance or and speed and angle you were traveling when you observed that photon, can't you just always work out what the actual energy change is that created that photon, in which case isn't the energy change of that object not actually relative, doesn't actually have to be a definite value in order for you to have measured it at the frequency and angle and speed you measured it at?
John Cuthber Posted January 8, 2012 Posted January 8, 2012 "but if you know the distance or and speed and angle you were traveling when you observed that photon" Speed and angle relative to what?
questionposter Posted January 8, 2012 Author Posted January 8, 2012 "but if you know the distance or and speed and angle you were traveling when you observed that photon" Speed and angle relative to what? I suppose to the source.
swansont Posted January 8, 2012 Posted January 8, 2012 I suppose to the source. Which makes the result relative to the source.
questionposter Posted January 8, 2012 Author Posted January 8, 2012 Which makes the result relative to the source. But that's the issue, because if you know all of the factors of the relativity, you would always be able to trace it back to the same energy change no matter how you relate to the position.
swansont Posted January 8, 2012 Posted January 8, 2012 But that's the issue, because if you know all of the factors of the relativity, you would always be able to trace it back to the same energy change no matter how you relate to the position. Yes, you can do a transform to see what the energy is in any other frame.
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