Page:Eddington A. Space Time and Gravitation. 1920.djvu/71

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
III]
THE WORLD OF FOUR DIMENSIONS
55

than one unit long—it has contracted on account of its motion relative to him.

Similarly is a rod of unit length at rest relatively to . Overlaying 's partitions we see that it occupies at

a particular instant for ; and this is less than one of 's partitions. Thus judges it to have contracted on account of its motion relative to him.

In the same way we can illustrate the problem of the duration of the cigar; each observer believed the other's cigar to last the longer time. Taking (Fig. 8) to represent the duration of 's cigar (two units), we see that in 's reckoning it reaches over a little more than two time-partitions. Moreover it has not kept to one space-partition, i.e. it has moved. Similarly is the duration of 's cigar (two time-units for him); and it lasts a little beyond two unit-partitions in 's time-reckoning. (Note, in comparing the two diagrams, , , are the same points as , , .)

If in Fig. 4 we had taken the line very near to , our