- #36
JesseM
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If it doesn't make sense to you, keep in mind that each observer measures speed in terms of distance/time according to his own set of rulers and clocks which are at rest relative to himself, with the clocks synchronized in his frame. But in relativity, each observer sees other observer's rulers and clocks as giving distorted readings, since each observer measures moving rulers squashed along their direction of motion by a factor of [tex]\gamma = 1/\sqrt{1 - v^2/c^2}[/tex], and moving clocks to be slowed-down by a factor of [tex]\gamma[/tex] and also out-of-sync with one another.Jarle said:This thread made me confused,
I know that the speed of light is c, a constant. And I thought that light traveled this distance compared to a place in the universe that is 100% still. so if you hypothetically traveled at the speed of c, and then decelerated with c, you would then stand 100% still.
But here i hear that if you are traveling at any speed, like 30% of the speed of light, you would observe the light as c! :O
let's say that someone shoots a photon in one direction. The shooter stands still, but you follows it with 50% of the speed of light. Would both measure that the photon is moving at the speed of c away from you?!
This makes no sense at all, but this is what i understand from this and other similar threads.
Suppose each observer has a long ruler at rest with respect to himself, and at each mark on the ruler is attached a clock, with all the clocks synchronized in that observer's frame (it's important to note that different frames disagree on 'simultaneity' in relativity, so clocks which are synchronized in their own rest frame will appear out-of-sync in other frames--if the clocks are synchronized and have a separation of x in their own rest frame, then in another frame where they're moving at speed v along the axis between them, the back clock will be ahead of the front clock by a time of vx/c^2). Each observer measures the light beam's speed by noting the time t1 on the clock at the mark m1 on his ruler as the light beam passes that mark, then later noting the time t2 on the clock at a different mark m2 on his ruler as the light beam passes that mark, and then calculating the speed as (m2 - m1)/(t2 - t1), or distance/time.Jarle said:But if the shooter waits 10 seconds. the light would be 300 000 * 10 kilometres away (ca), and the one who chases the light in 50% of c, travels for 10 sec, then light also is 300 000 * 10 kilomtres away.
Where is the light after ten sec? Light would be 1.5 times longer away in the second case, so it doesn't make sense at all.
Given all this, here is a little example I put together on another thread to show how two observers will both measure a light beam to have a speed of c using their own rulers and clocks:
Say there's a ruler that's 50 light-seconds long in its own rest frame, moving at 0.6c in my frame. In this case [tex]\gamma[/tex] is 1.25, so in my frame its length is 50/1.25 = 40 light seconds long. At the front and back of the ruler are clocks which are synchronized in the ruler's rest frame; because of the relativity of simultaneity, this means that in my frame they are out-of-sync, with the front clock's time being behind the back clock's time by vx/c^2 = (0.6c)(50 light-seconds)/c^2 = 30 seconds.
Now, when the back end of the moving ruler is lined up with the 0-light-seconds mark of my own ruler (with my own ruler at rest relative to me), I set up a light flash at that position. Let's say at this moment the clock at the back of the moving ruler reads a time of 0 seconds, and since the clock at the front is always behind it by 30 seconds in my frame, then in my frame the clock at the front must read -30 seconds at that moment. 100 seconds later in my frame, the back end will have moved (100 seconds)*(0.6c) = 60 light-seconds along my ruler, and since the ruler is 40 light-seconds long in my frame, this means the front end will be lined up with the 100-light-seconds mark on my ruler. Since 100 seconds have passed, if the light beam is moving at c in my frame it must have moved 100 light-seconds in that time, so it will also be at the 100-light-seconds mark on my ruler, just having caught up with the front end of the moving ruler.
Since 100 seconds passed in my frame, this means 100/1.25 = 80 seconds have passed on the clocks at the front and back of the moving ruler. Since the clock at the back read 0 seconds when the flash was set off, it now reads 80 seconds; and since the clock at the front read -30 seconds, it now reads 50 seconds. And remember, the ruler was 50 light-seconds long in its own rest frame! So in its frame, where the clock at the front is synchronized with the clock at the back, the light flash was set off at the back when the clock there read 0 seconds, and the light beam passed the clock at the front when its time read 50 seconds, so since the ruler is 50-light-seconds long, the beam must have been moving at 50 light-seconds/50 seconds = c as well! So you can see that everything works out--if I measure distances and times with rulers and clocks at rest in my frame, I conclude the light beam moved at 1 c, and if a moving observer measures distance and times with rulers and clocks at rest in his frame, he also concludes the same light beam moved at 1 c.
If you like, I can also explain the details of your situation involving one person who shoots a light beam out and another who is moving at 0.5c relative to the shooter in the direction of the light beam (as seen in the shooter's frame), but the basic idea would be pretty much the same.
As measured by the rulers and clocks of the frame where they are both moving at 0.8c, the distance between them would increase at a rate of 1.6 light-years per year. But when each one measures the other's speed using their own rulers and clocks, they will not find that the other is moving away from them at 1.6c; you can use the formula for addition of relativistic velocities given here to show that each will measure the other to be moving at (0.8c + 0.8c)/(1 + 0.8^2) = (1.6c)/(1.64) = 0.9756c.Jarle said:Ok, here is another thing I have been thinking of:
let's say that a person is moving at 80% of c away from a point, and another person moves at 80% of c in the opposite direction. Then they move 160% of c away from each other, right? Or is this impossible too?
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