- #1
some bloke
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- 99
- TL;DR Summary
- the laws of physics dictate that nothing can exceed C, but if 2 ships travel away from one another at 0.6C, they would perceive each other as travelling faster than C (1.2C).
at what point does something class as travelling this fast?
This came to me in a blur of confusion whilst reading another thread about a giant wheel spinning, and it's made me confused. I'm hoping that this is something which someone can explain to me in a way I'll understand.
Summary of my knowledge:
1: the speed of light is the same in all directions, no matter how fast you are travelling, as discovered in the "Ethereal Wind" experiment.
2: no physical object can reach the speed of light
But what I'm confused about is what speed of light?
For example:
2 rockets leaving the earth, in opposite directions. The rockets accelerate to travel at 0.6C, relative to the earth.
Rocket 1 looks at rocket 2 and sees it moving away at 1.2C, and sees itself as stationary. Rocket 2 observes the same about rocket 1.
The same experiment works if Rocket 1 and Rocket 2 are passing each other at 0.6C, they will see themselves as stationary and the other as flying past at 1.2C.
Now imagine they are orbiting a point, 180° offset from one another, in the same direction (so they are always traveling in opposite linear directions from one another). This imitates a wheel, with the point as a hub and the ships as the outer edge. They travel at 0.6C, see one another as traveling at 1.2C but also at 0, as they are not moving compared to one another.
I don't really understand how these interactions play out. can someone help me?
Summary of my knowledge:
1: the speed of light is the same in all directions, no matter how fast you are travelling, as discovered in the "Ethereal Wind" experiment.
2: no physical object can reach the speed of light
But what I'm confused about is what speed of light?
For example:
2 rockets leaving the earth, in opposite directions. The rockets accelerate to travel at 0.6C, relative to the earth.
Rocket 1 looks at rocket 2 and sees it moving away at 1.2C, and sees itself as stationary. Rocket 2 observes the same about rocket 1.
The same experiment works if Rocket 1 and Rocket 2 are passing each other at 0.6C, they will see themselves as stationary and the other as flying past at 1.2C.
Now imagine they are orbiting a point, 180° offset from one another, in the same direction (so they are always traveling in opposite linear directions from one another). This imitates a wheel, with the point as a hub and the ships as the outer edge. They travel at 0.6C, see one another as traveling at 1.2C but also at 0, as they are not moving compared to one another.
I don't really understand how these interactions play out. can someone help me?