exchemist
Valued Senior Member
Thank you for your video link which the narrator explains time dilation, but explains very little on length contraction. I have noticed some rather strange posts from members, which I will choose to ignore as they are seemingly being aimed personally towards myself and have no relevance to the question I have asked.
I have not stated that I am any sort of expert, I have neither asked to learn, I have my own education preference of the original author.
http://www.bartleby.com/173/
Post four from James-''I think most physicists would be inclined to say that the length contraction of the object is a real effect'' implying the object does contract
In post five I say
''I do not mention the length contraction as being an illusion, I asked whether or not it was a visual thing or a thing subject to the actual object decreasing in length''
In post eight , origin replies this ''Don't forget their rulers have shrunk too!'' implying the object does contract
Then you post - ''Length contraction can be viewed as a kind of perspective illusion, as long as you recognize that illusions are still showing you something real (just unexpected).''implying the object doesn't contract
This is a bit confusing and contradictory , who's answer shall I take to be correct?
Actually I think this is a tricky thing. As the effect is only seen from the viewpoint of an observer who is in motion relative to the object observed, you cannot "freeze" the system while you carry out measurements on it at leisure. But calling it a "visual thing" is not right, because any form of information transfer between object and observer will be subject to the same phenomenon. So that makes it "real", rather than a "trick of the light".
(When origin points out the "rulers have shrunk too", he is arguing the object has NOT contracted from the viewpoint of someone travelling with the object, while from the viewpoint of the observer moving relative to the object, BOTH the object AND any mean of determining its length that moves with it have shrunk in proportion.)