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This is a question in David W. Hoggs SR Book, so it is not homework.
Problem 3-4
A rocket ship passes the Earth at speed B = 0.8 (B=v/c). Observers on the ship and on Earth agree that it is noon. Answer the following questions:
a)At 12:30pm, as read by a rocket ship clock(assuming it is the same rocket ship as above), the ship passes an interplanetary navigational station that is fixed relative to the Earth and whose clocks read Earth time. What time is it at the station?
I simply just used:
[tex]\frac{1}{\gamma}\Delta t = t_e[/tex]
I used this because if I take the rocket ships frame, than the Earth is moving, therefore Earth time is going slower relative to the rocket ship.
My answer is 12:18pm, this is the time at the station seen by the rocket ship. Also, if we go with the rest frame of Earth, than the station reads 12:18pm in the rocket ship, while the time on Earth/station would be 12:30pm.
If we assume that it is a different rocket ship clock, which the question does not clearly state, than time changes relative to v of the other rocket ship, which v is not given, so we can only assume v, or come up with a partial equation. I didn't bother doing this. I'm only concerned with my train of thought, and not my algebra skills.
That is only a), but I'm sure I'll get the rest if I get my thinking right.
This is what I am thinking...
If a rocket going v passes by us, we see the rocket's time as going slow. Also, for the rocket passing us, the rocket will see our time as slow.
I think that because if we take the rocket's frame, than we are moving at speed v and the rocket at 0, therefore the rocket will see our time as slow.
Any advice would gladly help.
Problem 3-4
A rocket ship passes the Earth at speed B = 0.8 (B=v/c). Observers on the ship and on Earth agree that it is noon. Answer the following questions:
a)At 12:30pm, as read by a rocket ship clock(assuming it is the same rocket ship as above), the ship passes an interplanetary navigational station that is fixed relative to the Earth and whose clocks read Earth time. What time is it at the station?
I simply just used:
[tex]\frac{1}{\gamma}\Delta t = t_e[/tex]
I used this because if I take the rocket ships frame, than the Earth is moving, therefore Earth time is going slower relative to the rocket ship.
My answer is 12:18pm, this is the time at the station seen by the rocket ship. Also, if we go with the rest frame of Earth, than the station reads 12:18pm in the rocket ship, while the time on Earth/station would be 12:30pm.
If we assume that it is a different rocket ship clock, which the question does not clearly state, than time changes relative to v of the other rocket ship, which v is not given, so we can only assume v, or come up with a partial equation. I didn't bother doing this. I'm only concerned with my train of thought, and not my algebra skills.
That is only a), but I'm sure I'll get the rest if I get my thinking right.
This is what I am thinking...
If a rocket going v passes by us, we see the rocket's time as going slow. Also, for the rocket passing us, the rocket will see our time as slow.
I think that because if we take the rocket's frame, than we are moving at speed v and the rocket at 0, therefore the rocket will see our time as slow.
Any advice would gladly help.
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