Submitted by AutoModerator t3_10qwrk9 in askscience
nivlark t1_j6v0vqr wrote
Reply to comment by Okonomiyaki_lover in Ask Anything Wednesday - Physics, Astronomy, Earth and Planetary Science by AutoModerator
Ship A thinks they are standing still - again, both the Earth and Ship B are moving towards them.
The difference in distances is not because of the speed of the ship, it's because of the speed of light. Ship A receives light from Ship B that started travelling some time ago, when B was further away. As the two ships approach, the time lag decreases until it vanishes when they meet - which means that from A's perspective, time onboard B is running fast.
Okonomiyaki_lover t1_j6v76i9 wrote
Ok so it's more about ship b's progress is compressed and then ship a is essentially watching the ffwd version of the information coming to them.
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