Difference between revisions of "Moving Clocks, Reference Frames and the Twin Paradox"

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==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
''IEEE AES Systems Magazine <span style="font-weight: bold;">11</span> (1) pp. 27-31 (''''Jan 1996'''').'' We have seen in a previous paper that it is the act of a moving clock out of one inertial frame of reference (IFR) and into another IFR which causes the clock to slow [1]. But what of identical clocks constructed and calibrated in different IFRs? This paper takes a looks at such a scenario, demonstrating that two such clocks would tick synchronously and concludes with a new look at the famous "twin-paradox" of special relativity, SRT.<br />[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
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''IEEE AES Systems Magazine <span style="font-weight: bold;">11</span> (1) pp. 27-31 (''''Jan 1996'''').'' We have seen in a previous paper that it is the act of a moving clock out of one inertial frame of reference (IFR) and into another IFR which causes the clock to slow [1]. But what of identical clocks constructed and calibrated in different IFRs? This paper takes a looks at such a scenario, demonstrating that two such clocks would tick synchronously and concludes with a new look at the famous "twin-paradox" of special relativity, SRT.<br />
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|moving clocks reference frames twin paradox]]
  
 
[[Category:Relativity]]
 
[[Category:Relativity]]

Revision as of 10:43, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title Moving Clocks, Reference Frames and the Twin Paradox
Author(s) Curtis E Renshaw
Keywords {{{keywords}}}
Published 1996
Journal None
Volume 11
Number 1
Pages 27-31

Abstract

IEEE AES Systems Magazine 11 (1) pp. 27-31 ('Jan 1996'). We have seen in a previous paper that it is the act of a moving clock out of one inertial frame of reference (IFR) and into another IFR which causes the clock to slow [1]. But what of identical clocks constructed and calibrated in different IFRs? This paper takes a looks at such a scenario, demonstrating that two such clocks would tick synchronously and concludes with a new look at the famous "twin-paradox" of special relativity, SRT.