Giovanelli, Marco
(2026)
Is Time Dilation 'Real' ? Einstein and the Transverse Doppler Effect.
[Preprint]
Abstract
As early as 1907, Einstein realized that the second-order transverse Doppler redshift reported by Stark in the spectral lines of fast-moving ions in canal rays could serve as a direct experimental test of time dilation. He rejected Stark's dynamical explanation of the effect as a real frequency change of the moving ions. Instead, assuming that ions of the same kind emit the same spectral lines when at relative rest, Einstein offered a kinematical explanation of the frequency shift as a consequence of time dilation. He labeled the effect apparent, since it disappears for the co-moving observer. At the same time, he regarded it as real, in the sense that it would not occur if the old kinematics held. From the 1920s onward, Einstein argued that the behavior of atomic clocks calls for a dynamical explanation. The present paper shows, however, that even if an special relativistic explanation of the spectral identity of atoms were available, it would merely reinforce the claim that relativistic time dilation admits a purely kinematical interpretation. It concludes that modern dynamists misread Einstein's plea for a dynamical account of clock behavior as a demand for explanation of the time dilation, whereas it was primarily motivated by the problem of its confirmation.
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