I'm not sure what you're replying to here.Broomstick wrote:Well, yes and no - the story would have two frames of reference, after all, that aboard ship and that back on the home planet.
Not quite. The situation is symmetric: either they both perceive each other as sped up or both perceive each other as slowed down. Which it is depends on whether they're moving toward or away each other. The perceived speed-up occurs when they're closing distance and the perceived slow-down when they're separating. The relativistic Doppler factor gives the amount by which this occurs, in this case about 6.2.Broomstick wrote:Even without a time lag (say, a relativistic-speed ship passing close to a planet - not this story but a different one) the planet-based "stationary"* group would perceive any real-time communication with the passing ship as slowed-down. Anyone on the passing ship would perceive real-time communications from the planet as speeded-up. You could have text or video messages passing between the two groups and play them back.
N.B. What is measured is not necessarily what is seen or perceived. The Doppler shift is a combination of both time dilation and the distance-caused signal delay.
No, they both have a time lag in their replies. How much time it takes for a signal to reach them and for the reply to travel back is determined by their distance apart, as they're communicating with signals with finite speed. How fast the reply gets there is not the same thing as how much sped-up or slowed-down the reply itself is.Broomstick wrote:Those on the ship might perceive any replies as instantaneous or nearly so, whereas on the planet even an immediate reply might have a noticeable time lag.
It depends entirely on the encoding, but for most sensible encoding schemes, there will be no color differences--the video feed would just be sped-up or slowed-down, which is something that can be compensated for through buffering. Of course, if they just looked at each other through a telescope, that image would be very Doppler-shifted.Broomstick wrote:I can't figure out if real-time communications sound would be dopplered up or down. If they are, then I have to wonder if the lighting/color of a video feed would also show doppler effects, which may or may not be particularly noticeable to a human eye.
As as simple example, say they're communicating a digital signal by sending pulses of red light, flash for bit 1 and lack of flash for bit 0 or whatever (for simplicity), with the bitrate 1 Mbps. An Doppler factor of about ~2 would mean that the pulses arrive blue instead of red and that the bitrate is ~2 Mbps instead (i.e., the time between flashes/lack-of-flashes is shorter). But in this scheme, the information the signal carries is completely unaffected.
Right. Note for 'hard' ansibles (i.e., neglecting the fact that any ansible exists in the first place), communication is instantaneous in only one inertial frame, while every other frame has to have a finite though superluminal signal speed. The reason is that it's the only kind of ansible compatible with special relativity in the sense of not breaking causality.Broomstick wrote:In this case, if communications are at lightspeed there would be both time distortion effects and a time lag due to distance.