most people (or I am doing the xkcd comic thing again) probably have some idea that gravity wells have weird effects on the local passage of time and that time dilation occurs near very massive objects like black holes
this property of spacetime called relativity has tangible effects even over much smaller scales such as the gravitational difference between Earth and the Moon. on the Moon, an atomic clock will complete 24 standard hours 53 microseconds faster than the same device on Earth. this amounts to a gain of one second for the Moon every fifty Earth years or so
as recently as 2024 humans have come to realize this could actually cause problems as many different countries and corporations explore the Moon each under their own command in the coming decades — a one second discrepancy in a joint space mission could potentially cause Serious problems. so there has since been an international effort to decide a universal Coordinated Lunar Time system. the math to solve this problem is anything but simple
behold one of the first major efforts toward LTC, developed by Chinese researchers and released for free to the world: https://github.com/xlucn/LTE440
this software brings the accuracy up from a discrepancy of one second per fifty years to just 15 nanoseconds, good enough to be stable for thousands of years. unless the US or European proposals underway prove more accurate, it may be the best system we have until someone actually lands an array of atomic clocks on the Moon similar to how precise time is kept on Earth
most people (or I am doing the xkcd comic thing again) probably have some idea that gravity wells have weird effects on the local passage of time
omg wait do gravity wells affect the passage of time indirectly, because they like to move objects at high velocities? or is it possible to be completely stationary next to a completely stationary gravity well and still have the passage of time be affected?
@leinna @winter woahh that is fucking wild but I think it at least kinda makes sense?
like if you’re freefalling, it feels like you’re weightless because presumably you’re accelerating downwards in a way that perfectly counteracts the upwards acceleration of gravity
so is it acceleration that causes time dilation, and not speed? I thought it was speed but I might be wrong
this was a really interesting read btw! and thanks for explaining this
@kasdeya @winter when you are in a gravity well , space itself is moving "downwards" which is why we fall so even stationary inside a gravity well , you are moving. It is the elevator rule: you can't differentiate being in a constantly accelerating elevator in space or in a stationary elevator in a gravity well, so the acceleration affects the universe the same in both cases
@winter @kasdeya Sure if you have any more questions just ask, but I prob wont respond quickly nor go into as much detail cause I need to do other things. And all my knowledge is just stuff Ive read over the years so I may not be able to answer anything more than that anyway… But if you want to go into more detail id recommend you to read and understand the twin paradox, since it covers basically all aspects of special relativity. Its pretty interesting and the explanation includes stuff like:
In a sense, during the U-turn the plane of simultaneity jumps from blue to red and very quickly sweeps over a large segment of the world line of the Earth-based twin.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_paradox
https://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/SR/clock.html