- #1
ManDay
- 159
- 1
Spinning "tornado" wheel - circumference and radius
Another quote from my current lecture "elgant universe":
Page 63, 3rd Paragraph
This doesn't make much sense to me. While I can comprehend that the ruler must be shortened as it's layed out tagentially to the circumference, as it's moving in the direction of which it's layed out, I would assume that the circumference too is shortened, implying that Slim will get the same result for the circumference as we would, when the ride is standing still. In other words, let Slim start measuring the circumference when the ride is standing and then spin it up - assuming that his ruler is actually layed out exactly on the circumference, no discrepance should emerge.
We however, perceive a contracted circumference due to Lorentz contraction but the same radius, meaning that in our system of observation, the ratio has changed.
Another quote from my current lecture "elgant universe":
Page 63, 3rd Paragraph
We ask Slim and Jim, who are currently enyoing a spin on the Tornado, to take a few measurements for us. [...] As Slim begins to measure the circumference, we immediately see from our [stationary] bird's-eye perspective that he is going to get a different answer than we did. As he lays the ruler out along the circumference, we notice that the ruler's length is shortened. [...] This means that Slim will measure a longer circumference than we did. [Jim, however, is measuring the same radius as we did] But now, when Slim and Jim calculate the ratio of the circumference [...] to its radius they will get a number that is larger than our answer of two times pi.
This doesn't make much sense to me. While I can comprehend that the ruler must be shortened as it's layed out tagentially to the circumference, as it's moving in the direction of which it's layed out, I would assume that the circumference too is shortened, implying that Slim will get the same result for the circumference as we would, when the ride is standing still. In other words, let Slim start measuring the circumference when the ride is standing and then spin it up - assuming that his ruler is actually layed out exactly on the circumference, no discrepance should emerge.
We however, perceive a contracted circumference due to Lorentz contraction but the same radius, meaning that in our system of observation, the ratio has changed.