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Time dilation
View on Wikipedia| Special relativity |
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Time dilation is the difference in elapsed time as measured by two clocks, either because of a relative velocity between them (special relativity), or a difference in gravitational potential between their locations (general relativity). When unspecified, "time dilation" usually refers to the effect due to velocity. The dilation compares "wristwatch" clock readings between events measured in different inertial frames and is not observed by visual comparison of clocks across moving frames.
These predictions of the theory of relativity have been repeatedly confirmed by experiment, and they are of practical concern, for instance in the operation of satellite navigation systems such as GPS and Galileo.[1]
Invisibility
[edit]Time dilation is a relationship between clock readings. Visually observed clock readings involve delays due to the propagation speed of light from the clock to the observer. Thus there is no direct way to observe time dilation. As an example of time dilation, two experimenters measuring a passing train traveling at .86 light speed may see a 2 second difference on their clocks while on the train the engineer reports only one second elapsed when the experimenters went by. Observations of a clock on the front of the train would give completely different results: the light from the train would not reach the second experimenter only 0.27s before the train passed. This effect of moving objects on observations is associated with the Doppler effect.[2]
History
[edit]Time dilation by the Lorentz factor was predicted by several authors at the turn of the 20th century.[3][4] Joseph Larmor (1897) wrote that, at least for those orbiting a nucleus, individual electrons describe corresponding parts of their orbits in times shorter for the [rest] system in the ratio: .[5] Emil Cohn (1904) specifically related this formula to the rate of clocks.[6] In the context of special relativity it was shown by Albert Einstein (1905) that this effect concerns the nature of time itself, and he was also the first to point out its reciprocity or symmetry.[7] Subsequently, Hermann Minkowski (1907) introduced the concept of proper time which further clarified the meaning of time dilation.[8]
Time dilation caused by a relative velocity
[edit]
Special relativity indicates that, for an observer in an inertial frame of reference, a clock that is moving relative to the observer will be measured to tick more slowly than a clock at rest in the observer's frame of reference. This is sometimes called special relativistic time dilation. The faster the relative velocity, the greater the time dilation between them, with time slowing to a stop as one clock approaches the speed of light (299,792,458 m/s).
In theory, time dilation would make it possible for passengers in a fast-moving vehicle to advance into the future in a short period of their own time. With sufficiently high speeds, the effect would be dramatic. For example, one year of travel might correspond to ten years on Earth. Indeed, a constant 1 g acceleration would permit humans to travel through the entire known Universe in one human lifetime.[10]
With current technology severely limiting the velocity of space travel, the differences experienced in practice are minuscule. After 6 months on the International Space Station (ISS), orbiting Earth at a speed of about 7,700 m/s, an astronaut would have aged about 0.005 seconds less than he would have on Earth.[11] The cosmonauts Sergei Krikalev and Sergey Avdeev both experienced time dilation of about 20 milliseconds compared to time that passed on Earth.[12][13]
Simple inference
[edit]
Right: Events according to an observer watching as the mirror setup moves to the right: bottom mirror A when signal is generated at time t'=0, top mirror B when signal gets reflected at time t'=D/c, bottom mirror A when signal returns at time t'=2D/c[14]
Time dilation can be inferred from the observed constancy of the speed of light in all reference frames dictated by the second postulate of special relativity. This constancy of the speed of light means that, counter to intuition, the speeds of material objects and light are not additive. It is not possible to make the speed of light appear greater by moving towards or away from the light source.[15][16]
The relativity of time can be illustrated with a thought experiment based on an abstract vertical clock consisting of two mirrors A and B, between which a light pulse is bouncing.[17] The separation of the mirrors is L and the clock ticks once each time the light pulse hits mirror A. In the frame in which the clock is at rest (see left part of the diagram), the light pulse traces out a path of length 2L and the time period between the ticks of the clock is equal to 2L divided by the speed of light c:
From the frame of reference of a moving observer traveling at the speed v relative to the resting frame of the clock (right part of diagram), the light pulse is seen as tracing out a longer, angled path 2D. Keeping the speed of light constant for all inertial observers requires a lengthening (that is dilation) of the time period between the ticks of this clock from the moving observer's perspective. That is to say, as measured in a frame moving relative to the local clock, this clock will be running (that is ticking) more slowly, since tick rate equals one over the time period between ticks 1/.
Straightforward application of the Pythagorean theorem leads to the well-known prediction of special relativity:
The total time for the light pulse to trace its path is given by:
The length of the half path can be calculated as a function of known quantities as:
Elimination of the variables D and L from these three equations results in:
which expresses the fact that the moving observer's period of the clock is longer than the period in the frame of the clock itself. The Lorentz factor gamma (γ) is defined as[18]
Because all clocks that have a common period in the resting frame should have a common period when observed from the moving frame, all other clocks—mechanical, electronic, optical (such as an identical horizontal version of the clock in the example)—should exhibit the same velocity-dependent time dilation.[19]
Reciprocity
[edit]
Given a certain frame of reference, and the "stationary" observer described earlier, if a second observer accompanied the "moving" clock, each of the observers would measure the other's clock as ticking at a slower rate than their own local clock, due to them both measuring the other to be the one that is in motion relative to their own stationary frame of reference.
Common sense would dictate that, if the passage of time has slowed for a moving object, said object would observe the external world's time to be correspondingly sped up. Counterintuitively, special relativity predicts the opposite. When two observers are in motion relative to each other, each will measure the other's clock slowing down, in concordance with them being in motion relative to the observer's frame of reference.

While this seems self-contradictory, a similar oddity occurs in everyday life. If two persons A and B observe each other from a distance, B will appear small to A, but at the same time, A will appear small to B. Being familiar with the effects of perspective, there is no contradiction or paradox in this situation.[20]
The reciprocity of the phenomenon also leads to the so-called twin paradox where the aging of twins, one staying on Earth and the other embarking on space travel, is compared, and where the reciprocity suggests that both persons should have the same age when they reunite. On the contrary, at the end of the round-trip, the traveling twin will be younger than the sibling on Earth. The dilemma posed by the paradox can be explained by the fact that situation is not symmetric. The twin staying on Earth is in a single inertial frame, and the traveling twin is in two different inertial frames: one on the way out and another on the way back. See also Twin paradox § Role of acceleration.
Experimental testing
[edit]Moving particles
[edit]- A comparison of muon lifetimes at different speeds is possible. In the laboratory, slow muons are produced; and in the atmosphere, very fast-moving muons are introduced by cosmic rays. Taking the muon lifetime at rest as the laboratory value of 2.197 μs, the lifetime of a cosmic-ray-produced muon traveling at 98% of the speed of light is about five times longer, in agreement with observations. An example is Rossi and Hall (1941), who compared the population of cosmic-ray-produced muons at the top of a mountain to that observed at sea level.[21]
- The lifetime of particles produced in particle accelerators are longer due to time dilation. In such experiments, the "clock" is the time taken by processes leading to muon decay, and these processes take place in the moving muon at its own "clock rate", which is much slower than the laboratory clock. This is routinely taken into account in particle physics, and many dedicated measurements have been performed. For instance, in the muon storage ring at CERN the lifetime of muons circulating with γ = 29.327 was found to be dilated to 64.378 μs, confirming time dilation to an accuracy of 0.9 ± 0.4 parts per thousand.[22]
Doppler effect
[edit]- The stated purpose by Ives and Stilwell (1938, 1941) of these experiments was to verify the time dilation effect, predicted by Larmor–Lorentz ether theory, due to motion through the ether using Einstein's suggestion that Doppler effect in canal rays would provide a suitable experiment. These experiments measured the Doppler shift of the radiation emitted from cathode rays, when viewed from directly in front and from directly behind. The high and low frequencies detected were not the classically predicted values:The high and low frequencies of the radiation from the moving sources were measured as:[23]as deduced by Einstein (1905) from the Lorentz transformation, when the source is running slow by the Lorentz factor.
- Hasselkamp, Mondry, and Scharmann[24] (1979) measured the Doppler shift from a source moving at right angles to the line of sight. The most general relationship between frequencies of the radiation from the moving sources is given by:as deduced by Einstein (1905).[25] For ϕ = 90° (cos ϕ = 0) this reduces to fdetected = frestγ. This lower frequency from the moving source can be attributed to the time dilation effect and is often called the transverse Doppler effect and was predicted by relativity.
- In 2010 time dilation was observed at speeds of less than 10 metres per second using optical atomic clocks connected by 75 metres of optical fiber.[26]
Proper time and Minkowski diagram
[edit]In the Minkowski diagram from the first image on the right, clock C resting in inertial frame S′ meets clock A at d and clock B at f (both resting in S). All three clocks simultaneously start to tick in S. The worldline of A is the ct-axis, the worldline of B intersecting f is parallel to the ct-axis, and the worldline of C is the ct′-axis. All events simultaneous with d in S are on the x-axis, in S′ on the x′-axis.
The proper time between two events is indicated by a clock present at both events.[27] It is invariant, i.e., in all inertial frames it is agreed that this time is indicated by that clock. Interval df is, therefore, the proper time of clock C, and is shorter with respect to the coordinate times ef=dg of clocks B and A in S. Conversely, also proper time ef of B is shorter with respect to time if in S′, because event e was measured in S′ already at time i due to relativity of simultaneity, long before C started to tick.
From that it can be seen, that the proper time between two events indicated by an unaccelerated clock present at both events, compared with the synchronized coordinate time measured in all other inertial frames, is always the minimal time interval between those events. However, the interval between two events can also correspond to the proper time of accelerated clocks present at both events. Under all possible proper times between two events, the proper time of the unaccelerated clock is maximal, which is the solution to the twin paradox.[27]
Derivation and formulation
[edit]
In addition to the light clock used above, the formula for time dilation can be more generally derived from the temporal part of the Lorentz transformation.[28] Let there be two events at which the moving clock indicates and , thus:
Since the clock remains at rest in its inertial frame, it follows , thus the interval is given by:
where Δt is the time interval between two co-local events (i.e. happening at the same place) for an observer in some inertial frame (e.g. ticks on their clock), known as the proper time, Δt′ is the time interval between those same events, as measured by another observer, inertially moving with velocity v with respect to the former observer, v is the relative velocity between the observer and the moving clock, c is the speed of light, and the Lorentz factor (conventionally denoted by the Greek letter gamma or γ) is:
Thus the duration of the clock cycle of a moving clock is found to be increased: it is measured to be "running slow". The range of such variances in ordinary life, where v ≪ c, even considering space travel, are not great enough to produce easily detectable time dilation effects and such vanishingly small effects can be safely ignored for most purposes. As an approximate threshold, time dilation of 0.5% may become important when an object approaches speeds on the order of 30,000 km/s (1/10 the speed of light).[29]
Hyperbolic motion
[edit]In special relativity, time dilation is most simply described in circumstances where relative velocity is unchanging. Nevertheless, the Lorentz equations allow one to calculate proper time and movement in space for the simple case of a spaceship which is applied with a force per unit mass, relative to some reference object in uniform (i.e. constant velocity) motion, equal to g throughout the period of measurement.
Let t be the time in an inertial frame subsequently called the rest frame. Let x be a spatial coordinate, and let the direction of the constant acceleration as well as the spaceship's velocity (relative to the rest frame) be parallel to the x-axis. Assuming the spaceship's position at time t = 0 being x = 0 and the velocity being v0 and defining the following abbreviation:
the following formulas hold:[30]
Position:
Velocity:
Proper time as function of coordinate time:
In the case where v(0) = v0 = 0 and τ(0) = τ0 = 0 the integral can be expressed as a logarithmic function or, equivalently, as an inverse hyperbolic function:
As functions of the proper time of the ship, the following formulae hold:[31]
Position:
Velocity:
Coordinate time as function of proper time:
Clock hypothesis
[edit]The clock hypothesis is the assumption that the rate at which a clock is affected by time dilation does not depend on its acceleration but only on its instantaneous velocity. This is equivalent to stating that a clock moving along a path measures the proper time, defined by:
The clock hypothesis was implicitly (but not explicitly) included in Einstein's original 1905 formulation of special relativity. Since then, it has become a standard assumption and is usually included in the axioms of special relativity, especially in light of experimental verification up to very high accelerations in particle accelerators.[32][33]
Time dilation caused by gravity or acceleration
[edit]
Gravitational time dilation is experienced by an observer that, at a certain altitude within a gravitational potential well, finds that their local clocks measure less elapsed time than identical clocks situated at higher altitude (and which are therefore at higher gravitational potential). Unlike velocity time dilation, in which both observers measure the other as aging slower (a reciprocal effect), gravitational time dilation is not reciprocal. This means that with gravitational time dilation both observers agree that the clock nearer the center of the gravitational field is slower in rate, and they agree on the ratio of the difference.[citation needed]
Gravitational time dilation is at play e.g. for ISS astronauts. While the astronauts' relative velocity slows down their time, the reduced gravitational influence at their location speeds it up, although to a lesser degree.[citation needed] Also, a climber's time is theoretically passing slightly faster at the top of a mountain compared to people at sea level.
"A clock used to time a full rotation of the Earth will measure the day to be approximately an extra 10 ns/day longer for every km of altitude above the reference geoid."[34] Travel to regions of space where extreme gravitational time dilation is taking place, such as near (but not beyond the event horizon of) a black hole, could yield time-shifting results analogous to those of near-lightspeed space travel.
Richard Feynman suggested in a lecture that, due to time dilation, the core of the Earth is younger than the crust. Subsequent calculations suggest the core is 2.5 years younger, out of 4.5 billion years.[35]
Experimental testing
[edit]- In 1959, Robert Pound and Glen Rebka measured the very slight gravitational redshift in the frequency of light emitted at a lower height, where Earth's gravitational field is relatively more intense. The results were within 10% of the predictions of general relativity. In 1964, Pound and J. L. Snider measured a result within 1% of the value predicted by gravitational time dilation.[36] (See Pound–Rebka experiment)
- In 2010, gravitational time dilation was measured at the Earth's surface with a height difference of only one meter, using optical atomic clocks.[26]
Combined effect of velocity and gravitational time dilation
[edit]
High-accuracy timekeeping, low-Earth-orbit satellite tracking, and pulsar timing are applications that require the consideration of the combined effects of mass and motion in producing time dilation. Practical examples include the International Atomic Time standard and its relationship with the Barycentric Coordinate Time standard used for interplanetary objects.
Relativistic time dilation effects for the Solar System and the Earth can be modeled very precisely by the Schwarzschild solution to the Einstein field equations. In the Schwarzschild metric, the interval is given by:[38][39]
where:
- is a small increment of proper time (an interval that could be recorded on an atomic clock),
- is a small increment in the coordinate (coordinate time),
- are small increments in the three coordinates of the clock's position,
- represents the sum of the Newtonian gravitational potentials due to the masses in the neighborhood, based on their distances from the clock. This sum includes any tidal potentials.
| General relativity |
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The coordinate velocity of the clock is given by:
The coordinate time is the time that would be read on a hypothetical "coordinate clock" situated infinitely far from all gravitational masses (), and stationary in the system of coordinates (). The exact relation between the rate of proper time and the rate of coordinate time for a clock with a radial component of velocity is:
where:
- is the radial velocity,
- is the escape speed,
- , and are velocities as a percentage of speed of light c,
- is the Newtonian potential; hence equals half the square of the escape speed.
The above equation is exact under the assumptions of the Schwarzschild solution. It reduces to velocity time dilation equation in the presence of motion and absence of gravity, i.e. . It reduces to gravitational time dilation equation in the absence of motion and presence of gravity, i.e. .
Experimental testing
[edit]
- Hafele and Keating, in 1971, flew caesium atomic clocks east and west around the Earth in commercial airliners, to compare the elapsed time against that of a clock that remained at the U.S. Naval Observatory. Two opposite effects came into play. The clocks were expected to age more quickly (show a larger elapsed time) than the reference clock since they were in a higher (weaker) gravitational potential for most of the trip (cf. Pound–Rebka experiment). But also, contrastingly, the moving clocks were expected to age more slowly because of the speed of their travel. From the actual flight paths of each trip, the theory predicted that the flying clocks, compared with reference clocks at the U.S. Naval Observatory, should have lost 40±23 nanoseconds during the eastward trip and should have gained 275±21 nanoseconds during the westward trip. Relative to the atomic time scale of the U.S. Naval Observatory, the flying clocks lost 59±10 nanoseconds during the eastward trip and gained 273±7 nanoseconds during the westward trip (where the error bars represent standard deviation).[40] In 2005, the National Physical Laboratory in the United Kingdom reported their limited replication of this experiment.[41] The NPL experiment differed from the original in that the caesium clocks were sent on a shorter trip (London–Washington, D.C. return), but the clocks were more accurate. The reported results are within 4% of the predictions of relativity, within the uncertainty of the measurements.
- The Global Positioning System can be considered a continuously operating experiment in both special and general relativity. The in-orbit clocks are corrected for both special and general relativistic time dilation effects as described above, so that (as observed from the Earth's surface) they run at the same rate as clocks on the surface of the Earth.[42]
In popular culture
[edit]Popular misconception
[edit]The unexpected nature of time dilation makes it a common subject of misconception. One form of misconception claims that time dilation applies only to light-based clocks, such as the “light clock” used in many textbook derivations of the Lorentz transformation, and not to mechanical, atomic, or biological timekeeping devices. This misunderstanding can lead to incorrect conclusions about experimental results, such as the Hafele–Keating experiment, which involved atomic clocks flown around the Earth.[43]
To address this, a thought experiment known as Einstein’s Cat was proposed by physicist Val G. Rousseau.[43] The scenario involves a fictional device—the Sync-or-Die clock—that compares the synchronization of a light clock and a mechanical stopwatch. The life of a cat depends on the precise timing between these two clocks when analyzed in different inertial frames. The paradox arises when time dilation is assumed to apply only to the light pulse but not the mechanical clock. Under this incorrect assumption, the cat would be expected to die only by observers moving relative to the cat. The apparent contradiction is resolved when both clocks are recognized as equally subject to relativistic time dilation. This illustrates the fundamental principle that time dilation is a universal feature of special relativity, independent of the clock’s internal mechanism.
In fiction
[edit]Velocity and gravitational time dilation have been the subject of science fiction works in a variety of media. Some examples in film are the movies Interstellar and Planet of the Apes.[44] In Interstellar, a key plot point involves a planet, which is close to a rotating black hole and on the surface of which one hour is equivalent to seven years on Earth due to time dilation.[45] Physicist Kip Thorne collaborated in making the film and explained its scientific concepts in the book The Science of Interstellar.[46][47]
The Queen song '39 was written by astrophysicist as well as musician Brian May, and is centred around the time dilation effect on spacefarers searching for a new home for mankind, as we gradually ruin planet Earth. They return successful, only to find that all and everything they knew has long since passed away.
Time dilation was used in the Doctor Who episodes "World Enough and Time" and "The Doctor Falls", which take place on a spaceship in the vicinity of a black hole. Due to the immense gravitational pull of the black hole and the ship's length (400 miles), time moves faster at one end than the other. When The Doctor's companion, Bill, gets taken away to the other end of the ship, she waits years for him to rescue her; in his time, only minutes pass.[48] Furthermore, the dilation allows the Cybermen to evolve at a "faster" rate than previously seen in the show.
Tau Zero, a novel by Poul Anderson, is an early example of the concept in science fiction literature. In the novel, a spacecraft uses a Bussard ramjet to accelerate to high enough speeds that the crew spends five years on board, but thirty-three years pass on the Earth before they arrive at their destination. The velocity time dilation is explained by Anderson in terms of the tau factor which decreases closer and closer to zero as the ship approaches the speed of light—hence the title of the novel.[49] Due to an accident, the crew is unable to stop accelerating the spacecraft, causing such extreme time dilation that the crew experiences the Big Crunch at the end of the universe.[50] Other examples in literature, such as Rocannon's World, Hyperion and The Forever War, similarly make use of relativistic time dilation as a scientifically plausible literary device to have certain characters age slower than the rest of the universe.[51][52]
See also
[edit]Footnotes
[edit]References
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{{cite book}}:|work=ignored (help) - ^ Larmor, Joseph (1897). . Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. 190: 205–300. Bibcode:1897RSPTA.190..205L. doi:10.1098/rsta.1897.0020.
- ^ Cohn, Emil (1904), [On the Electrodynamics of Moving Systems II], Sitzungsberichte der Königlich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften (in German and English), vol. 1904/2, no. 43, pp. 1404–1416
- ^ Einstein, Albert (1905). "Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper". Annalen der Physik (in German). 322 (10): 891–921. Bibcode:1905AnP...322..891E. doi:10.1002/andp.19053221004.. See also: English translation.
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{{citation}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ Petkov, Vesselin (2009). Relativity and the Nature of Spacetime (2nd, illustrated ed.). Springer Science & Business Media. p. 87. ISBN 978-3-642-01962-3. Extract of page 87
- ^ See equations 3, 4, 6 and 9 of Iorio, Lorenzo (2005). "An analytical treatment of the Clock Paradox in the framework of the Special and General Theories of Relativity". Foundations of Physics Letters. 18 (1): 1–19. arXiv:physics/0405038. Bibcode:2005FoPhL..18....1I. doi:10.1007/s10702-005-2466-8. S2CID 15081211.
- ^ Rindler, W. (1977). Essential Relativity. Springer. pp. 49–50. ISBN 978-3540079705.
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- ^ Roos, C. E.; Marraffino, J.; Reucroft, S.; Waters, J.; Webster, M. S.; Williams, E. G. H. (1980). "σ+/- lifetimes and longitudinal acceleration". Nature. 286 (5770): 244–245. Bibcode:1980Natur.286..244R. doi:10.1038/286244a0. S2CID 4280317.
- ^ Burns, M. Shane; Leveille, Michael D.; Dominguez, Armand R.; Gebhard, Brian B.; Huestis, Samuel E.; Steele, Jeffrey; Patterson, Brian; Sell, Jerry F.; Serna, Mario; Gearba, M. Alina; Olesen, Robert; O'Shea, Patrick; Schiller, Jonathan (18 September 2017). "Measurement of gravitational time dilation: An undergraduate research project". American Journal of Physics. 85 (10): 757–762. arXiv:1707.00171. Bibcode:2017AmJPh..85..757B. doi:10.1119/1.5000802. S2CID 119503665.
- ^ "New calculations show Earth's core is much younger than thought". Phys.org. 26 May 2016.
- ^ Pound, R. V.; Snider J. L. (November 2, 1964). "Effect of Gravity on Nuclear Resonance". Physical Review Letters. 13 (18): 539–540. Bibcode:1964PhRvL..13..539P. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.13.539.
- ^ Ashby, Neil (2002). "Relativity in the Global Positioning System". Physics Today. 55 (5): 45. Bibcode:2002PhT....55e..41A. doi:10.1063/1.1485583. PMC 5253894. PMID 28163638.
- ^ See equations 2 & 3 (combined here and divided throughout by c2) at pp. 35–36 in Moyer, T. D. (1981). "Transformation from proper time on Earth to coordinate time in solar system barycentric space-time frame of reference". Celestial Mechanics. 23 (1): 33–56. Bibcode:1981CeMec..23...33M. doi:10.1007/BF01228543. hdl:2060/19770007221. S2CID 118077433.
- ^ A version of the same relationship can also be seen at equation 2 inAshbey, Neil (2002). "Relativity and the Global Positioning System" (PDF). Physics Today. 55 (5): 45. Bibcode:2002PhT....55e..41A. doi:10.1063/1.1485583.
- ^ Nave, C. R. (22 August 2005). "Hafele and Keating Experiment". HyperPhysics. Retrieved 2013-08-05.
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- ^ Kaplan, Elliott; Hegarty, Christopher (2005). Understanding GPS: Principles and Applications. Artech House. p. 306. ISBN 978-1-58053-895-4. Extract of page 306
- ^ a b Rousseau, V.G. (2025). "Einstein’s Cat: A Thought Experiment on the Universality of Time Dilation". Physics Education. 60 (4). IOP Publishing. doi:10.1088/1361-6552/adedf1.
- ^ Weiner, Adam (30 April 2008). "The Science of Sci-Fi". Popular Science.
- ^ Luminet, Jean-Pierre (16 January 2016). "The Warped Science of Interstellar (4/6) : Time dilation and Penrose process". e-LUMINESCIENCES.
- ^ Kranking, Carlyn (31 May 2019). Wagner, Ryan (ed.). "Time travel in movies, explained". North by Northwestern.
- ^ Tyson, Neil deGrasse (12 July 2017). "Neil deGrasse Tyson Breaks Down 'Interstellar': Black Holes, Time Dilations, and Massive Waves". The Daily Beast (Interview). Interviewed by Marlow Stern.
- ^ Collins, Frank (26 June 2017). "DOCTOR WHO, 10.11 – 'World Enough and Time'". Frame Rated.
- ^ Meaney, John (17 December 2003). "Time passages (2)". John Meaney's WebLog.
- ^ Langford, David; Stableford, Brian M (20 August 2018). Clute, John; Langford, David; Nicholls, Peter; Sleight, Graham (eds.). "Relativity". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.
- ^ Cramer, John G. (20 August 1989). "The Twin Paradox Revisited". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. No. March-1990 – via University of Washington.
- ^ Walter, Damien (22 February 2018). "It's about time: how sci-fi has described Einstein's universe". The Guardian.
Further reading
[edit]- Callender, C.; Edney, R. (2001). Introducing Time. Icon Books. ISBN 978-1-84046-592-1.
- Einstein, A. (1905). "Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper" (PDF). Annalen der Physik. 322 (10): 891. Bibcode:1905AnP...322..891E. doi:10.1002/andp.19053221004.
- Einstein, A. (1907). "Über die Möglichkeit einer neuen Prüfung des Relativitätsprinzips". Annalen der Physik. 328 (6): 197–198. Bibcode:1907AnP...328..197E. doi:10.1002/andp.19073280613.
- Hasselkamp, D.; Mondry, E.; Scharmann, A. (1979). "Direct Observation of the Transversal Doppler-Shift". Zeitschrift für Physik A. 289 (2): 151–155. Bibcode:1979ZPhyA.289..151H. doi:10.1007/BF01435932. S2CID 120963034.
- Ives, H. E.; Stilwell, G. R. (1938). "An experimental study of the rate of a moving clock". Journal of the Optical Society of America. 28 (7): 215–226. Bibcode:1938JOSA...28..215I. doi:10.1364/JOSA.28.000215.
- Ives, H. E.; Stilwell, G. R. (1941). "An experimental study of the rate of a moving clock. II". Journal of the Optical Society of America. 31 (5): 369–374. Bibcode:1941JOSA...31..369I. doi:10.1364/JOSA.31.000369.
- Joos, G. (1959). "Bewegte Bezugssysteme in der Akustik. Der Doppler-Effekt". Lehrbuch der Theoretischen Physik, Zweites Buch (11th ed.).
- Larmor, J. (1897). "On a dynamical theory of the electric and luminiferous medium". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. 190: 205–300. Bibcode:1897RSPTA.190..205L. doi:10.1098/rsta.1897.0020. (third and last in a series of papers with the same name).
- Poincaré, H. (1900). "La théorie de Lorentz et le principe de Réaction" (PDF). Archives Néerlandaises. 5: 253–78.
- Puri, A. (2015). "Einstein versus the simple pendulum formula: does gravity slow all clocks?". Physics Education. 50 (4): 431. Bibcode:2015PhyEd..50..431P. doi:10.1088/0031-9120/50/4/431. S2CID 118217730.
- Reinhardt, S.; et al. (2007). "Test of relativistic time dilation with fast optical atomic clocks at different velocities" (PDF). Nature Physics. 3 (12): 861–864. Bibcode:2007NatPh...3..861R. doi:10.1038/nphys778. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-07-12.
- Rossi, B.; Hall, D. B. (1941). "Variation of the Rate of Decay of Mesotrons with Momentum". Physical Review. 59 (3): 223. Bibcode:1941PhRv...59..223R. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.59.223.
- Weiss, M. "Two way time transfer for satellites". National Institute of Standards and Technology. Archived from the original on 2017-05-29.
- Voigt, W. (1887). "Über das Doppler'sche princip". Nachrichten von der Königlicher Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen. 2: 41–51.
External links
[edit]
Media related to Time dilation at Wikimedia Commons- Merrifield, Michael. "Lorentz Factor (and time dilation)". Sixty Symbols. Brady Haran for the University of Nottingham.
Time dilation
View on GrokipediaFundamentals
Definition and basic principles
Time dilation refers to the phenomenon in which the passage of time, as measured by two clocks, differs depending on their relative states of motion or positions in a gravitational field. This effect arises from Albert Einstein's theories of relativity, where time is not absolute but relative to the observer's frame of reference. In essence, it demonstrates that the duration between events can vary systematically for different observers, challenging classical notions of simultaneous and uniform time flow.[1][7] In special relativity, time dilation manifests due to relative velocity between observers. For a clock moving at speed relative to a stationary observer, the proper time elapsed on the moving clock is related to the coordinate time in the stationary frame by the formula where is the speed of light in vacuum. This indicates that the moving clock runs slower from the perspective of the stationary observer, with the dilation factor quantifying the effect. Einstein derived this in his 1905 paper by considering the relativity of simultaneity: events simultaneous in one inertial frame are not in another moving relative to it, leading to desynchronization of clocks and apparent slowing of time for the moving system. For example, a clock transported at high velocity and returned lags behind a stationary one by an amount proportional to . This principle holds for all physical processes, not just mechanical clocks, as it stems from the invariance of the speed of light.[1] In general relativity, gravitational time dilation occurs because time flows at different rates in regions of varying gravitational potential. Clocks deeper in a gravitational well—where the potential is more negative—tick slower compared to those at higher potentials. Einstein first predicted this in 1911 using the equivalence principle, equating a uniform gravitational field to acceleration: a clock in free fall (or at rest in gravity) experiences time dilation analogous to velocity effects. The frequency shift for light emitted from a lower to higher potential is given by implying that the time dilation factor for clocks is approximately , where is the potential difference. Thus, a clock on Earth's surface runs slower than one on a mountain by a fractional amount , with as gravitational acceleration and as height. This effect integrates the curvature of spacetime described in the full theory of 1915–1916.[7]Historical development
The concept of time dilation arose in the late 19th century amid attempts to reconcile classical electromagnetism with experimental evidence challenging the existence of the luminiferous ether. The Michelson-Morley experiment of 1887 sought to detect the Earth's motion through this hypothetical medium by measuring differences in light speed along perpendicular paths using an interferometer, but yielded a null result, showing no variation attributable to ether drift.[8] This unexpected outcome contradicted expectations from the ether theory and prompted theoretical innovations to preserve the invariance of Maxwell's equations for light propagation in all inertial frames. Hendrik Lorentz addressed this discrepancy through a series of papers developing transformations that adjust space and time coordinates for moving observers. In his 1895 work, Attempt of a Theory of Electrical and Optical Phenomena in Moving Bodies, Lorentz introduced the notion of "local time" () as a mathematical convenience to explain electromagnetic effects without altering the ether's absolute rest frame; this adjustment accounted for apparent clock desynchronization but was not yet interpreted as physical time slowing. By 1904, in Electromagnetic Phenomena in a System Moving with Any Velocity Smaller than that of Light, Lorentz generalized these to the full Lorentz transformations, including the dilation factor , and explicitly noted that moving systems experience a "slowing down of processes" equivalent to time dilation for clocks or molecular vibrations, though he attributed it to ether interactions affecting matter.[9] Henri Poincaré independently advanced these ideas, emphasizing their broader implications for mechanics and optics. In his June 1905 memoir On the Dynamics of the Electron, Poincaré endorsed Lorentz's transformations—coining the term "Lorentz transformations"—and interpreted local time as a real physical effect arising from the relativity of simultaneity, while proposing that the ether's influence is undetectable in principle, laying groundwork for a relativity principle.) He further explored clock behavior in moving frames, recognizing contraction and time adjustments as necessary for consistency across theories, though stopping short of full kinematic symmetry. Albert Einstein synthesized and transcended these contributions in his June 1905 paper On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies, deriving the Lorentz transformations axiomatically from two postulates: the principle of relativity (physical laws are identical in all inertial frames) and the constancy of light speed independent of source motion, dispensing entirely with the ether.[10] Einstein explicitly formulated time dilation through a thought experiment involving light signals reflected between mirrors on a moving train, demonstrating that the proper time elapsed on a clock at rest in one frame relates to the coordinate time in another by , with simultaneity itself being relative. This kinematic interpretation, symmetric between observers, marked time dilation as an intrinsic feature of spacetime geometry in special relativity, influencing subsequent formalisms like Minkowski's 1908 spacetime.[11]Special Relativistic Time Dilation
Velocity-induced effects
In special relativity, velocity-induced time dilation refers to the phenomenon where the passage of time differs between two observers moving at a constant relative velocity, such that each perceives the other's clock as running slower. This effect arises from the invariance of the speed of light and the relativity of simultaneity, as postulated by Albert Einstein in his foundational 1905 paper.[12] Specifically, for two inertial frames in relative motion, the time interval measured in one frame appears dilated when observed from the other.[12] A classic thought experiment illustrating this is the light clock, consisting of two mirrors separated by distance with a light pulse bouncing between them. In the clock's rest frame, the proper time for one round trip is , where is the speed of light. When the clock moves at velocity perpendicular to the mirrors relative to another observer, the light path elongates into a zigzag, forming right triangles with legs and , where is the time measured by the observer. Applying the Pythagorean theorem yields , leading to the relation , with the Lorentz factor . This demonstrates that moving clocks tick slower from the external observer's perspective, with the effect becoming pronounced as approaches . The quantitative effect is captured by Einstein's derivation using the Lorentz transformation, where the time coordinate transforms as . For a clock at rest in the moving frame (where ), the elapsed time relates to the coordinate time in the stationary frame by , confirming the dilation .[12] For small velocities (), the dilation approximates to a lag of , as derived for a clock transported in a closed path.[12] This symmetry implies mutual dilation between observers, resolved through the relativity of simultaneity rather than absolute time.[12] At relativistic speeds, such as , , meaning one second on the moving clock corresponds to over seven seconds for the stationary observer, highlighting the effect's scale in high-energy contexts like particle accelerators.Derivation from Lorentz transformation
The Lorentz transformation provides the mathematical framework for relating space and time coordinates between two inertial reference frames in special relativity, one of which moves at constant velocity relative to the other.[13] Consider two frames: frame and frame , where moves with velocity along the positive -axis relative to . The Lorentz transformation equations, derived from the postulates of relativity and the constancy of the speed of light , are: where is the Lorentz factor.[13] These equations replace the Galilean transformations of classical mechanics to preserve the invariance of the speed of light.[13] Time dilation emerges when considering the proper time interval measured by a clock at rest in one frame. Let the clock be at rest in at position . Two events occur at this clock: the first at and the second at , so the proper time interval is . In frame , these events occur at different positions because the clock moves with velocity . From the inverse Lorentz transformation (or by symmetry), the position in satisfies for both events, implying .[13] Substituting into the time transformation equation for the two events yields . Thus, the time interval in is .[13] This shows that the elapsed time in the "stationary" frame is longer than the proper time by the factor , meaning clocks moving relative to an observer appear to run slower—a phenomenon known as time dilation.[13] For small velocities (), , so the dilation effect is negligible, recovering classical results.[13] This derivation holds for any clock, as it follows directly from the spacetime geometry of special relativity, independent of the clock's internal mechanism.[13]Reciprocity and twin paradox
In special relativity, time dilation due to relative velocity is reciprocal: each of two observers in uniform relative motion measures the proper time interval between ticks of the other's clock to be longer than their own, by the factor , where is the relative speed and is the speed of light.[14] This symmetry arises because the Lorentz transformations treat the two inertial frames equivalently, leading to mutual perceptions of slowed clocks without violating the theory's consistency.[14] For instance, if observer A sees observer B's clock dilated by , observer B similarly sees A’s clock dilated by the same factor during their relative motion.[15] The twin paradox highlights an apparent contradiction in this reciprocity. Consider two twins: one remains on Earth (inertial frame S), while the other travels at relativistic speed to a distant star and returns. From the Earth twin's perspective, the traveling twin's clock runs slow outbound and inbound, so the traveler should age less upon reunion. However, during the inertial segments of the journey, the traveling twin would claim reciprocity, arguing that the Earth twin's clock runs slow relative to theirs, suggesting the Earth twin ages less—a symmetric impasse.[15] This paradox seems to challenge special relativity, as both twins cannot age less than the other. The resolution lies in the asymmetry introduced by the traveling twin's acceleration during turnaround, which breaks the reciprocity of the inertial frames. The Earth twin remains in a single inertial frame throughout, while the traveler switches frames, experiencing a shorter total proper time along their worldline in Minkowski spacetime.[16] The relativity of simultaneity further clarifies this: events simultaneous in one frame are not in another, so the traveler's reassessment of the Earth twin's clock upon frame change accounts for the additional elapsed time on Earth.[15] For a quantitative example, suppose the traveler moves at () for a round trip where the Earth twin measures 10 years total. The traveler's proper time is approximately 6 years, computed as for the inertial legs, confirming the age difference without needing general relativity—the accelerations are incidental to the core special relativistic explanation.[16]Experimental confirmations in special relativity
One of the earliest direct experimental confirmations of time dilation in special relativity came from the Ives–Stilwell experiment conducted in 1938, which measured the relativistic Doppler shift from fast-moving hydrogen canal rays accelerated to velocities up to 0.003c. By observing the spectral lines of these ions emitted at various angles, particularly near 90 degrees where classical Doppler effects are minimized, the experiment detected the transverse Doppler shift predicted by time dilation, with the observed frequency shift agreeing with the relativistic formula to within 1% accuracy.[17] Particle lifetime experiments provide compelling evidence for time dilation, as unstable particles like muons, when moving at relativistic speeds, exhibit dilated decay times compared to their rest-frame lifetimes. In the 1941 Rossi–Hall experiment, cosmic-ray muons produced at high altitudes (around 1.9 km) and traveling at average speeds near 0.99c were observed to reach sea level in greater numbers than expected from classical physics, with the measured decay rate matching the predicted dilation factor to within experimental error. Higher-precision tests followed using controlled environments, such as the 1977 CERN muon storage ring experiment, where positive and negative muons were circulated at (corresponding to ) for thousands of laps. The measured lifetimes were μs and μs, both consistent with the dilated rest lifetime of 2.197 μs multiplied by , confirming time dilation to a precision of 0.9 parts per thousand and ruling out alternative explanations like decay dependence on electric charge.[18] Modern atomic clock experiments further validate time dilation at macroscopic scales. In a 2007 test using optical atomic clocks based on single ⁷Li⁺ ions accelerated to velocities up to 0.064c in a storage ring, the relative tick rates showed a velocity-dependent dilation matching special relativity to within 2.3 parts per thousand, isolating the effect by comparing clocks at different speeds while minimizing gravitational influences.[19] Similarly, a 2014 experiment with stored ⁷Li⁺ ions at (v ≈ 0.338c) measured proper time dilation in the ion rest frame to 2.3 parts per billion precision, providing a direct test of the clock hypothesis in special relativity.[20] These results collectively affirm the predictive power of special relativistic time dilation across a wide range of velocities and systems.General Relativistic Time Dilation
Gravitational effects
In general relativity, gravitational time dilation arises from the curvature of spacetime induced by mass, causing clocks in stronger gravitational fields to run slower relative to those in weaker fields, as measured by proper time. This means that an observer deeper in a gravitational potential experiences time passing more slowly compared to a distant observer. The effect is symmetric in the sense that it depends on the gravitational potential difference between locations, not absolute position.[21] Albert Einstein first derived a qualitative version of this effect in 1911, applying the equivalence principle to predict that light emitted from a clock in a gravitational field would appear redshifted to a distant observer, implying slower clock rates in the field.[7] In his 1916 review of general relativity, Einstein formalized how gravity influences the propagation of light and time measurement through spacetime geometry. The precise mathematical description emerges from solutions to Einstein's field equations; for a non-rotating, spherically symmetric mass , Karl Schwarzschild's 1916 metric describes the spacetime: where is the gravitational constant, is the speed of light, and is the radial coordinate. For a stationary observer at fixed (with ), the proper time elapsed on the clock relates to the coordinate time by This shows that for finite , with the dilation becoming more pronounced closer to the mass; at the Schwarzschild radius , time dilation diverges for external observers.[22] In the weak-field limit relevant to Earth (where ), the relative rate between two clocks at potentials and approximates to , with .[23] The Pound-Rebka experiment of 1959 provided the first direct laboratory confirmation, using the Mössbauer effect to measure the frequency shift of gamma rays traversing a 22.5-meter vertical distance in Harvard's Jefferson Laboratory tower. Gamma rays emitted upward showed a redshift (equivalent to time dilation), while downward emission showed a blueshift, matching general relativity's prediction of (with Earth's surface gravity and height) to about 10% accuracy; subsequent improvements reached 1% precision.[24] The 1971-1972 Hafele-Keating experiment complemented this by transporting cesium atomic clocks on commercial jets around the Earth, isolating the gravitational component from altitude variations in potential. For the eastward flight at ~10 km altitude, gravitational time dilation contributed a ~+144 ns gain relative to ground clocks, while the westward flight yielded ~+179 ns, aligning with predictions after isolating from velocity effects.[25] In practical systems like the Global Positioning System (GPS), gravitational time dilation is engineered into satellite clock rates. Orbiting at ~20,200 km, GPS satellites reside in a weaker field, causing their clocks to advance ~45 μs/day faster than surface clocks; this is offset by a factory pre-slowdown of 10.23 MHz and ongoing corrections to maintain synchronization within nanoseconds.[26]Acceleration equivalence
The equivalence principle, a cornerstone of general relativity, posits that the effects of a uniform gravitational field are locally indistinguishable from those experienced in a uniformly accelerated reference frame without gravity. Formulated by Albert Einstein in 1907, this principle extends the relativity of special relativity to accelerated systems by asserting that no local experiment can differentiate between the two scenarios.[27] In the context of time dilation, it implies that acceleration-induced effects on clocks, analogous to velocity-based time dilation in special relativity, must correspond to gravitational influences on time measurement.[28] To illustrate, consider Einstein's thought experiment involving an elevator accelerating upward at a constant rate in free space. A light pulse emitted from the floor toward the ceiling at the moment of emission will travel a straight path at speed relative to the inertial frame outside the elevator. However, by the time the light reaches the ceiling, the elevator has moved upward, making the light's path appear curved and longer in the accelerated frame. This path lengthening results in a Doppler-like frequency shift for the light, where the received frequency at the ceiling is lower than the emitted frequency by approximately , with the height of the elevator.[7] Interpreting this shift as a change in clock rates—since frequency is inversely proportional to the period—the clock at the ceiling (higher "effective potential") runs faster than the one at the floor. By the equivalence principle, this effect must hold in a stationary elevator within a uniform gravitational field of strength , where the floor experiences a stronger field than the ceiling.[7] This reasoning yields the first-order prediction for gravitational time dilation: the rate of a clock at gravitational potential (where for small heights near Earth's surface) slows relative to one at higher potential by the factor , or equivalently, the proper time interval relates to coordinate time as .[7] In general relativity, this is incorporated into the Schwarzschild metric, but the equivalence principle provides the foundational heuristic link between acceleration and gravitational time effects, demonstrating that time flows more slowly deeper in a gravitational well, just as it does for accelerated observers.[23]Experimental confirmations in general relativity
One of the earliest laboratory confirmations of gravitational time dilation came from the Pound-Rebka experiment, which measured the gravitational redshift of gamma rays using the Mössbauer effect. In this setup, researchers at Harvard University directed 14.4 keV gamma rays from an iron-57 source upward through a 22.5-meter tower, observing a fractional frequency shift of (2.5 ± 0.7) × 10^{-15}, consistent with the general relativistic prediction of Δf/f = gh/c², where g is gravitational acceleration, h is height, and c is the speed of light.[29] This result achieved approximately 10% agreement with theory, providing initial evidence for the redshift effect predicted by general relativity. An improved version by Snider in 1972 refined the measurement to 1% precision using time-dependent Doppler compensation, yielding a redshift parameter of 1.01 ± 0.01 times the expected value. Further confirmation arose from clock comparison experiments that directly tested time dilation in varying gravitational potentials. The Hafele-Keating experiment in 1971 flew cesium atomic clocks on commercial airliners eastward and westward around the Earth, isolating the gravitational component after accounting for special relativistic effects. The eastward flight clocks lost 59 ± 10 nanoseconds relative to ground clocks, while westward ones gained 273 ± 7 nanoseconds, with the gravitational redshift contributing a net +144 ± 14 nanoseconds, aligning with general relativistic predictions to within experimental error. This demonstrated time running slower for clocks at higher altitudes due to weaker gravitational fields. A more precise space-based test was the Vessot-Levine experiment, known as Gravity Probe A, launched in 1976 on a Scout rocket carrying a hydrogen maser clock to 10,000 km altitude. Comparing the rocket clock's frequency to a ground-based maser over two hours, the experiment measured a fractional frequency shift of (4.4720 ± 0.0008) × 10^{-10}, matching the general relativistic prediction of 4.4705 × 10^{-10} to better than 0.02% precision, confirming gravitational time dilation without significant special relativistic contamination.[30] Ongoing verification is provided by the Global Positioning System (GPS), where satellite clocks at 20,200 km altitude experience a net relativistic time gain of about 38 microseconds per day due to gravitational effects dominating over velocity-induced dilation. This +45.7 microseconds/day gravitational advance is pre-corrected in satellite oscillators to maintain synchronization with ground clocks, ensuring positional accuracy within meters; without these adjustments, errors would accumulate to kilometers daily, underscoring the practical confirmation of general relativity.[31] Subsequent missions, such as the 2018 Galileo satellite redshift test, have further validated the effect to parts in 10^5 using optical clocks, reinforcing these foundational results.[32] More recent laboratory experiments include a 2023 blinded test using an array of five optical lattice atomic clocks separated by 1 meter vertically, which confirmed the gravitational redshift effect with a precision of 0.22 parts per billion, equivalent to detecting a height difference of 11 mm.[33] Additionally, as of April 2025, the Atomic Clock Ensemble in Space (ACES) mission on the International Space Station has begun operations, enabling high-precision measurements of gravitational time dilation in orbit to test general relativity at new levels of accuracy.[34]Combined and Advanced Effects
Integration of velocity and gravity
In general relativity, the integration of velocity-induced and gravitational time dilation occurs naturally through the curvature of spacetime described by the metric tensor. Unlike special relativity, where velocity effects are isolated in flat spacetime, or the weak-field approximation for gravity alone, the full theory combines both via the proper time along a clock's worldline, given by , where encodes both inertial motion and gravitational influence. For the Schwarzschild metric, applicable to a spherically symmetric, non-rotating mass , the line element is with proper time incorporating the clock's velocity components alongside the gravitational factor . This unification shows that velocity and gravity are not additive in a simple arithmetic sense but interact through the geometry, as derived from Einstein's field equations. A representative case is a clock in a circular geodesic orbit at radial coordinate (the innermost stable circular orbit) around a central mass, where the orbital angular velocity (in units where , ). Substituting into the metric for equatorial motion (), the proper time rate relative to coordinate time at infinity is This formula emerges from , where the first term reflects gravitational redshift and the second the special-relativistic velocity effect with , but modified by the curved geometry; the net term shows their interplay, with stable orbits impossible below due to excessive dilation. For example, near Earth ( m, mm), this yields a fractional rate difference of about , emphasizing the subtle scale.[35] Experimentally, the Hafele–Keating experiment of 1971 integrated these effects using cesium atomic clocks flown eastward and westward around Earth on commercial jets. In the weak-field limit, the total time shift approximates the sum of kinematic dilation (from special relativity, with flight duration ) and gravitational dilation (from the equivalence principle, with altitude ), yielding net predictions of ns (eastward, velocity dominates) and ns (westward, gravity dominates). Measured values were ns and ns, confirming the combined theory to within 10–20%. A modern application is the Global Positioning System (GPS), where satellites at m experience gravitational acceleration of clocks by μs/day but velocity deceleration by μs/day, netting μs/day; this is pre-corrected by running satellite clocks 10.23 MHz slower at launch.[25][31]Clock hypothesis and proper time
In special relativity, proper time refers to the time interval measured by a clock that travels along a specific worldline between two spacetime events, representing the duration experienced in the clock's instantaneous rest frame. This quantity, denoted , is Lorentz invariant, meaning it is the same for all observers regardless of their inertial frame, unlike coordinate time which varies with relative motion. Mathematically, for a timelike path in Minkowski spacetime, proper time is defined as where is the worldline, is coordinate time, and is the speed of light; this formulation originates from Hermann Minkowski's 1908 introduction of spacetime geometry, where he termed it "eigenzeit" to emphasize its role as the intrinsic "own time" along a material trajectory.[36] In the context of time dilation, proper time for a moving clock is shorter than the coordinate time measured in a stationary frame, related by for constant velocity , establishing the foundation for both velocity-induced and, by extension, gravitational effects.[37] The clock hypothesis extends this framework to non-inertial observers by asserting that the ticking rate of an ideal clock at any instant depends solely on its instantaneous velocity relative to a local inertial frame, unaffected by acceleration or jerk, provided internal forces dominate over external ones. This assumption, implicit in Einstein's original 1905 postulates but formalized later, ensures that proper time accumulation along accelerated worldlines can be computed by integrating the instantaneous Lorentz factor over the trajectory, without additional corrections for non-uniform motion.[38] For example, in analyses using light clocks—devices where light pulses bounce between mirrors—the hypothesis is justified rigorously: as the mirror separation approaches zero, the clock's measured intervals converge to the proper time defined by the spacetime metric, validating its use even in curved or accelerated paths.[39] In combined velocity and gravitational contexts, the clock hypothesis unifies special and general relativistic time dilation by treating accelerated clocks equivalently to those in instantaneously comoving inertial frames or local geodesic coordinates, enabling precise predictions for scenarios like the twin paradox or orbital clocks. This principle underpins the operational definition of ideal clocks in relativity, where proper time serves as the fundamental measure of duration, bridging flat and curved spacetimes without invoking history-dependent effects.[38]Applications in modern technology
One of the most prominent applications of time dilation in modern technology is in the Global Positioning System (GPS), where both special and general relativistic effects must be precisely accounted for to ensure accurate satellite-based navigation. GPS satellites orbit Earth at approximately 14,000 km/h and at an altitude of about 20,200 km, subjecting their onboard atomic clocks to competing time dilation influences. According to special relativity, the high orbital velocity causes these clocks to run slower than identical clocks on Earth's surface by about 7 microseconds per day, as moving clocks experience time dilation relative to stationary observers.[40] Conversely, general relativity predicts that the weaker gravitational field at orbital altitude accelerates the clocks, causing them to run faster by roughly 45 microseconds per day compared to ground-based clocks.[41] The net result is a gain of approximately 38 microseconds per day for satellite clocks, which, if uncorrected, would introduce positioning errors of up to 10 km per day in GPS receivers.[42] To mitigate these effects, GPS system designers implement relativistic corrections directly into the satellite clocks and receiver algorithms. Onboard cesium and rubidium atomic clocks are preset to tick at a slightly slower rate—by a factor of about 4.45 × 10^{-10}—to compensate for the predicted net time dilation, ensuring synchronization with ground time to within 20-30 nanoseconds.[40] Receivers further apply velocity-dependent corrections using ephemeris data broadcast from the satellites. These adjustments are critical for the system's centimeter-level accuracy, enabling applications from civilian navigation to military precision targeting and scientific timekeeping worldwide. Without such relativistic accounting, the cumulative errors would render GPS unreliable for everyday use.[43] In particle physics, time dilation plays a crucial role in the design and operation of accelerators and storage rings, particularly for studying short-lived particles like muons. Muons, with a mean proper lifetime of about 2.2 microseconds, decay rapidly at rest but experience significant lifetime extension due to relativistic speeds approaching the speed of light in accelerators. This dilation allows muons to complete thousands of orbits in storage rings, such as those used in the g-2 experiments at CERN and Fermilab, where their anomalous magnetic moments are measured to probe physics beyond the Standard Model.[44] For instance, at velocities of 0.9994c, the observed muon lifetime dilates by a factor of γ ≈ 29.3, enabling data collection over milliseconds rather than microseconds and achieving precision down to parts per billion.[45] These experiments rely on precise modeling of time dilation to interpret decay rates and magnetic field interactions, advancing fundamental research in quantum field theory and potential new particle discoveries.Misconceptions and Cultural Impact
Common misunderstandings
One prevalent misunderstanding is that time dilation in special relativity is merely an optical illusion caused by the finite speed of light, rather than a genuine physical effect on the passage of time itself. In reality, time dilation represents a fundamental alteration in the rate at which clocks tick when measured in different inertial frames, independent of light propagation delays; for instance, experiments with atomic clocks on airplanes confirm this intrinsic slowing of proper time for moving observers.[46] Another common error involves the phrasing that "time passes more slowly in the moving frame," suggesting an absolute slowing of time within that frame, whereas time dilation specifically describes the slower rate observed for a clock in motion relative to a stationary observer's frame, with simultaneity and proper time remaining normal within the moving frame itself. This confusion often leads to incorrect intuitions about reciprocity, where each observer sees the other's clock as dilated symmetrically in special relativity.[46] In the context of the twin paradox, a frequent misconception is that special relativity cannot resolve the apparent asymmetry in aging between the traveling twin and the stationary one because acceleration requires general relativity; however, special relativity fully accounts for the effect through the traveler's change of inertial frames during turnaround, resulting in less proper time elapsed for the accelerated twin without invoking gravitational fields. This error stems from overlooking that special relativity handles non-inertial motion via instantaneous inertial approximations in flat spacetime.[47][48] For gravitational time dilation in general relativity, some mistakenly attribute the desynchronization of accelerating clocks solely to equivalence principle effects mimicking gravity, conflating special relativistic Doppler shifts with true gravitational redshift; in fact, while acceleration in flat spacetime produces analogous time effects via special relativity's coordinate transformations, curved spacetime introduces additional path-dependent influences not reducible to mere velocity.[49] A related oversight is assuming time dilation effects are visually apparent in real-time observations, such as seeing a moving clock's hands lag immediately; actually, what observers "see" is often dominated by relativistic aberration and light-travel delays, masking the true measured dilation, which requires synchronized clock comparisons to detect.[50]Depictions in popular culture
Time dilation frequently appears in science fiction as a plot device to illustrate the psychological and societal impacts of relativistic effects during space travel. In the 1968 film Planet of the Apes, directed by Franklin J. Schaffner, astronauts traveling at near-light speeds experience velocity-based time dilation, returning to find Earth advanced by over 2,000 years, with human society overturned. The 2014 film Interstellar, directed by Christopher Nolan with scientific consultation from physicist Kip S. Thorne, portrays gravitational time dilation on Miller's planet, orbiting close to the supermassive black hole Gargantua; here, one hour equates to seven Earth years due to intense gravitational fields. Similarly, the 2022 animated film Lightyear incorporates special relativistic time dilation in its narrative, where test pilot Buzz Lightyear's repeated hyperspace jumps cause decades to pass on Earth for each mission, leading to personal isolation as colleagues age and die.[51] In literature, Poul Anderson's 1970 novel Tau Zero centers on a Bussard ramjet starship whose uncontrolled acceleration to relativistic velocities results in extreme time dilation, compressing billions of years of cosmic evolution into mere months for the crew aboard. Joe Haldeman's 1974 novel The Forever War uses time dilation to depict the disorienting effects of interstellar warfare, as soldiers returning from near-light-speed missions confront a radically altered human culture, with centuries elapsed between deployments. The 2016 film Passengers, written by Jon Spaihts, briefly references time dilation in the context of its century-long interstellar journey to a colony world, where a cryosleep malfunction leads to early awakening and isolation aboard the ship.[52] In television, Star Trek: The Next Generation's 1989 episode "The Price" references time dilation in discussions of a stable wormhole's effects on temporal flow between distant points.[53]References
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Translation:Space_and_Time
