I think that whether photons have a mass in an issue of controversy, but I'll drop it.GreyICE wrote:Dory, yes, time slows down (and distance decreases, V = D/T (and light speed is constant) relative to the speed you're traveling.
But this wouldn't make you age slower. You'd still age one year for every year that you lived. It's just that if someone leaves your frame of reference and come back, they might end up with a different calender than you - different day, different year, different clock.
To examine your super-spinny planet, lets give it a second frame of reference, another planet that is spinning at a normal pace that is nearby. Yes, the people on super-spin would age slower than the people on slow spin.
However, both of them would agree that super-spin was undergoing acceleration, so they'd both agree on what the time dilation should be.
P.S. Light doesn't get to have a point of view, for the same reason that it doesn't get to have a mass.
I will say that physics has certainly become my chosen scientific field. I really, really, love it. I hope to see a lot of physics as I move through the mechatronics (practical engineer) degree.
Keep up the good fight...and thanks for the feedback, Grey, mistermack, that totally cleared it for me.
