Relativity of Simultaneity deals with the apparent order of events, as observed by moving observers. It says nothing about what the order actually is.
A ship with an ansible at high relative velocity experiences time dilation yes. But all clocks keep moving forward, only the rates are different. At what point does the ship travel 10 minutes into the past?
Say a ship is moving ~0.93c and has a time dilation factor of 3. It sends a message via ansilbe that says "Call back in 3 minutes". The call comes in 1 minute later ship time. The reply will always come after the message.
I read the link again and watched the videos. All there is, is time dilation, light cones and some graphs based on the theory that nothing can go FTL. But plotting an FTL course through non-FTL theory and getting a nonsense result doesn't equal time travel. There is nothing that indicates at exactly what point an FTL ship actually goes backwards in time. It equals an inability of the theory to describe what is actually happening.
Instantaneous in all frames.
It's becoming clear to me that the paradox is not created by FTL, but by the Lorentz transformations trying to define relativistic travel.You say that the nova star and second star system are 2.5ly apart in ship frame. But the two stars are actually 5ly apart. The ship would know that from its charts. It would know that light cannot travel 5ly in 2.5yr. The speed of light did not increase and the two stars did not move closer together. It is the time dilation on the ship that makes it appear that the two events are 2.5ly apart. By that, the ship knows that it is not an "at rest" reference frame, but is suffering relativistic effects.Similarly, the t's for the two events ship frame result from plotting world lines for those events in its clock slowed reference frame, but those are not real, they are illusions. The nova, the 2nd star system, Earth and the ship all exist at real points in space. Nothing is moving except the ship and it is not going backwards in time. An ansible network in constant communication with all 4 as the ship accelerates from 0 to 0.6c would observe the time dilation, but would only see the ship's clock continuing to move forward. At no point does it slip into the past. The ansible keeps all the clocks in sync and exposes the illusion. But there is no paradox, information cannot be sent into the past.
You say that the nova star and second star system are 2.5ly apart in ship frame.
But the two stars are actually 5ly apart. The ship would know that from its charts.
It is the time dilation on the ship that makes it appear that the two events are 2.5ly apart. By that, the ship knows that it is not an "at rest" reference frame, but is suffering relativistic effects.
...You can also see how a paradox can come about if you allow FTL, because as the ship is passing Earth an ansible on Earth would receive the communication that the star went nova. They can relay this information to the ship that is passing by Earth. For the ship, the star will not go nova for 7.5 years. If it sends an ansible message to that star, the message will arrive years before the star goes nova, because "now" for the ship is different from "now" on Earth.
Time dilation is not an illusion, that is the only thing that is real. The gamma factor of relativistic travel is real and that is what separates the reference frames from each other. The Solar system and surrounding stars are moving at about 0.00075c. That is what separates our reference frame from that of a 0.6c ship.
The ship observes the two stars as 4ly apart (not 2.5 sorry) and knows that time dilation is distorting its observations of surrounding objects.
Due to length contraction, they are 5/1.25 = 4 light years apart. The second star spends the next 2.5 years travelling towards where the nova happened at 0.6c so the time that passes in the ship frame between the 2 events is 2.5 years. (The nova remnants are also moving at the same speed so they remain 4 light years away from the second star.)
I'm not giving up the Theory of Relativity. I'm giving up a graphical projection that says a relativistic ship has time shifted into the past. It hasn't.
The message sent "to" that star is moving "toward" the star, not away from it. In the frame of the message, the space-time axis must rotate so as to approach the star, not move away from it as in the ship's frame. The paradox is caused by ignoring this 3rd reference frame of the message "approaching" the star. IMO, I agree with the one statement in that paper I found, and that is; if we can't travel into the past while at rest or moving STL, then we can't do it moving FTL either, because all motion is relative.
...the Postulates of Special Relativity? 1. The laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames of reference.2. The speed of light in vacuum has the same value c in all inertial frames of reference.
Moving relative to everything we see around us. Our galaxy, the local group.
Quote from: WarpTech on 08/01/2017 04:55 pmThe message sent "to" that star is moving "toward" the star, not away from it. In the frame of the message, the space-time axis must rotate so as to approach the star, not move away from it as in the ship's frame. The paradox is caused by ignoring this 3rd reference frame of the message "approaching" the star. IMO, I agree with the one statement in that paper I found, and that is; if we can't travel into the past while at rest or moving STL, then we can't do it moving FTL either, because all motion is relative.Defining an FTL frame causes problems, so to work around that you can simply and validly just look at what happens in the STL inertial frames.In the Earth frame, the ansible sends information from the nova to Earth travelling on an apparent path of that follows the t = 0 line in that frame. (you can give it some small positive slope if you want, the effective result doesn't change.)You had previously correctly stated the postulates of relativity. Per the first of those, the laws of physics are the same on the ship. As a result, a signal in the ship frame should also be able to travel to the star that goes nova following the t = 0 line in that frame.Quote from: WarpTech on 07/27/2017 11:28 pm...the Postulates of Special Relativity? 1. The laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames of reference.2. The speed of light in vacuum has the same value c in all inertial frames of reference.
An observer's state of motion cannot affect an observed object, but it can affect the observer's observations of the object.
If we have a Gamma of 1, and the ship has a Gamma of 1.25, how are those equivalent? How do I ignore that a ship that has accelerated is pretending it did nothing of the sort?All the factors you list explain the consistency of the speed of light. What they don't explain is how acceleration equals an actual time shift into the past that would cause an ansible communicated paradox.QuoteAn observer's state of motion cannot affect an observed object, but it can affect the observer's observations of the object.