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cfrogue
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JesseM said:In the launch frame the string won't experience any change in length until it snaps. As I've said, the stress in the string will increase though. I think when people cite "Lorentz contraction" as an explanation for the string breaking, what they're getting at is that the string "wants" to contract but can't because it's attached to the ships...it may be easier to make sense of this if we think of a spring rather than a string, since you may remember from classical mechanics that springs have a "rest length" that they naturally assume when nothing is pulling or pushing on them (the rest length minimizing the stress in the spring), and that when they are pulled to a greater length than the rest length they pull back with greater and greater force, as if they are "trying" to return to that length (and obviously if you pull a spring far enough past its rest length, it'll snap). If you had two identical springs traveling alongside each other, one attached to the two ships and one with its ends free whose length was equal to its rest length, then the length of the free spring would grow shorter and shorter as seen by the launch frame as its velocity increased, which implies that the spring attached to the ships, whose length does not change in this frame, is being extended farther and farther past its own natural rest length.
Well, the SR acceleration equations indicate the distance between ther ships will not change.
From the POV of the rest observer, what is the math to indicate the space remains constant but a rod will contract if allowed between the two ships.
All these links show what happens from the POV of the accelerating ships.
I want to concentrate on the math from the rest/launch frame's POV.
Also, this paper seems to say something different.
4 Conclusion
We have seen that the physical length of an object is the rest frame length as
measured in the instantaneous rest frame of the object. For two spaceships
having equal accelerations, as in Bell’s spaceship example, the distance between
the moving ships appears to be constant, but the rest frame distance between
them continually increases. This means that a cable between the two ships must
eventually break if the acceleration continues.
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0906/0906.1919v2.pdf
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