Author's description of twin paradox is incorrect. In fact, the paradox is not described at all. The paradox is that since motion is relative then from both twin's perspective the other twin goes on a journey and ages slowly. So why it is that on returning, only the traveling twin has aged slowly? The answer is that both twins indeed see each other age slowly but for the traveling twin to come back they have to slow down to zero and reverse direction. At that moment the frame is no longer inertial. While turning around, the traveling twin will see the stationary twin age very quickly (enough to catch up with their earth age), so when they meet there's no paradox. For each of them the other has aged as per their observations.
nyrikki|1 year ago
The main issue with the twin paradox is that it demonstrates where our euclidian intuition fails us.
There are several interpretations on how to resolve it, but they are all just flawed lenses, intended to help you along a curriculum until you understand the math, and also understand the limitations of intuition.
The 'turn around' explanation is part of that and unfortunately often sold as the ultimate resolution.
floxy|1 year ago
That is awesome, I've always wondered about special relativity in a flat torus world. Do you have a recommendation for reading more about this?
Osmium|1 year ago
nayuki|1 year ago
pkoird|1 year ago
Because I lowekey believe this to be true but don't have means to prove it.
euroderf|1 year ago
mpclarkson|1 year ago
sigmoid10|1 year ago