= Light cone
{wiki}
A subset of <Spacetime diagram>.
The key insights that it gives are:
* future and past are well defined: every reference frame sees your future in your future cone, and your past in your past cone
Otherwise causality could be violated, and then things would go really bad, you could tell your past self to tell your past self to tell your past self to do something.
You can only affect the outcome of events in your future cone, and you can only be affected by events in your past cone. You can't travel fast enough to affect.
Two spacetime events with such fixed causality are called <timelike-separated events>.
* every other event (to right and left, known as <spacelike-separated events>) can be measured to happen before or after your current spacetime event by different observers.
But that does not violate causality, because you just can't reach those spacetime points anyways to affect them.
\Image[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/78/Relativity_of_Simultaneity_Animation.gif]
{title=Animation showing how space-separated events can be observed to happen in different orders by observers in different <frame of reference>[frames of reference]}
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