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time dilation

Name: Anonymous 2008-01-28 12:41

Can someone patiently explain time dilation to me?

d = 5 396 264 244 000 or 5.4 billion kilometers

takes light 5 hours from our perspective to travel that distance

from the perspective of the light, it happens in less than a minute

If a clock were mounted to a particle of light, the mechanism of the clock - each atomic component of the clock - would register less than a minute passing as the light traveled that distance.

Why?

Name: Anonymous 2008-01-28 17:46

So, a clock attached to a photon would never experience time passing while that photon moved through a vacuum? In a vacuum of infinite distance, the time the clock would record as having passed as the photon reached the opposite side (traveling the infinite distance) would be 0?

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