Take an earth-star and a spaceship frame. The spaceship is heading at near the speed of light towards the star from the earth. Now let's say that in the earth-star frame, there are three events
- the event that the spaceship passes the earth
- the event that the spaceship is destroyed by the exploding star
- the event that a clock on the star hits 10 years
We assume that in the earth-star frame, the spaceship is destroyed as soon as it reaches the star, and that exactly 10 years have passed by in this frame since event 1. That is, the spacetime interval is $(10,10v)$ between events 1) and 2). Moreover, the spacetime interval is $(0,0)$ between events 2) and 3).
Now here's the paradox. Let's switch to the spaceship frame. The spacetime interval is now $(\frac{10}{\gamma},0)$ between 1) and 2) and again $(0,0)$ between two and three. The spaceship is blown up exactly when the star clock reads 10 years. We have a problem now.
For 10 years passing by on the star clock in the earth-star frame, the spacetime interval is $(10,0)$, so in the spaceship frame, the interval is $(10 \gamma,10\gamma v)$. The clock on the star and earth moves by one factor of gamma slower. So at time of passing by, the star hasn't aged enough to explode, in fact it has only aged by $\frac{10}{\gamma^2}$ years.
What has gone wrong?