aggle-rithm
Ardent Formulist
I was going over Special Relativity in my head the other night, and just as it was starting to make sense to me, I came across a mental conundrum that has me stumped. I was thinking about the twins paradox, where one twin goes out into space, traveling at relativistic speeds for a while, then comes back, while the other stays on Earth. When the first twin returns, he is considerably younger than the second twin. That part is easy.
However, I considered the case where the first twin, on his return to Earth, decided to "buzz" the Earth before landing, so his brother could see him as he went by. To the earth-bound twin, the one in the spaceship is both space- and time-dilated. The ship appears shortened, and the twin in the ship appears to be moving very slowly, as time is passing more slowly for the itinerate twin since he is moving close to the speed of light.
However, from the inertial frame of the twin in the spaceship, he is standing still, and the Earth is zipping by at relativistic speeds. Therefore, the twin on the Earth, from his vantage point, should also appear to be moving slowly, so that when the first twin lands, it is the second twin that is younger, not the first.
What am I missing here?
However, I considered the case where the first twin, on his return to Earth, decided to "buzz" the Earth before landing, so his brother could see him as he went by. To the earth-bound twin, the one in the spaceship is both space- and time-dilated. The ship appears shortened, and the twin in the ship appears to be moving very slowly, as time is passing more slowly for the itinerate twin since he is moving close to the speed of light.
However, from the inertial frame of the twin in the spaceship, he is standing still, and the Earth is zipping by at relativistic speeds. Therefore, the twin on the Earth, from his vantage point, should also appear to be moving slowly, so that when the first twin lands, it is the second twin that is younger, not the first.
What am I missing here?