Seeing the mathematical derivation of the Lorentz Transformation for time coordinates of an event for two observers we get the term.
Now how to make sense physically of the t−vxc2 factor.
I am looking for an argument along the lines of the following. When relating spatial coordinates,
one observer measures the length separation between an event and the second observer in his frame and tells the other observer that this should be your length, which the second observer denies due to relativity of simultaneity and multiplies by the gamma factor to get the correct length.
Answer
Consider two observers O and O′ moving with velocity v with respect to each other. Both of them will use a photon bouncing off a mirror to define any kind of duration, so it is easy to show that their duration will satisfy the relation Δt′=γΔt,
and a similar argument with measuring any relative distance Δl between points in the direction of relative movement gives
Δl′=γΔl.
The stated relations will hold under any coordinate convention. Now suppose observer O decides to establish a coordinate convention by setting t=t′=0 when her coordinate origin x=0 met with the coordinate origin x′=0 of O′. She then asserts that the relative distance between their origins grows as −vt, so they have after transforming any relative distances x′=γ(x−vt).
x′=γx,t′=γt.
The term in the transformation is thus a consequence of the fact that we choose to mix a vt factor into the coordinate convention which in turn requires a skewing of time through space. It is very important during the discussion of special relativity to remember that this is a conventional (non-physical) coordinate transform fix.
EDIT: As requested, I will present a direct derivation which gives first a conventional meaning to simultaneity (the t=const.) before requesting the consistency of the x coordinate and without any explicit statement of length contraction. We only have to presume we already know the standard derivation of the relation Δt′=Δt√1−v2/c2
Consider the following simultaneity convention:
Consider an array of clocks in rest with respect to O, this is a fixed observable feature. A light signal is sent from the origin of O (this is the conventional point, the referential signal point could be anywhere in the coordinate system, even moving with respect to it) denoting the t=0 moment.
All the clocks set their time to t=0 upon receiving the signal even though there is a certain delay δtC for every individual clock C and immediately send a light signal with their identification back to O. O receives the signal from a clock C at a time tC.
She naturally concludes that tC=Δl/c+Δl/c and from that computes that when she sends a signal to C, the signal will be there at a delay δtC=tC/2. She then sends a signal to C at her own time t to set itself to t+δtC. Once this process is finished for every clock C, a notion of the time coordinate t or simultaneity is established globally for all points seen by O.
But consider now that O watches O′ while establishing a similar convention with respect to a similar set of clocks, i.e., a set of clocks which is moving with a velocity v in the x direction with respect to O but is in rest with respect to O′. O′ sends out the signal at t′=0, but the clocks in front of her (in the direction of motion) are "rushing away from the signal" with the speed of light constant, so the delay will be longer. On the contrary, the clocks behind O′ are "rushing towards the signal", so the delay is shorter. For clocks strictly in front of and behind O′, we have a delay δtb/f=Δlc±v
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