Traveling 10 Lightyears at 75% Speed - Time & Average Speed

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of traveling at near-light speeds and its effects on distance and time. It explains the Lorenz factor equation and how it is used to calculate the time and distance traveled. The conversation also touches on the concept of "proper speed" and how it can be faster than the speed of light, but only in relation to a stationary reference frame. It is also clarified that no matter which reference frame is used, the traveler will not appear to be traveling faster than light.
  • #1
shamphys
11
0
hi there looking for answers/explanation for this thought

if a spaceship was to travel 10 light years at 75% the speed of light how long would it take(from the person inside the spaceships point off view) to travel 10 lightyears and what would be the average speed

thanks
 
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  • #2
Here's the Lorenz factor equation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorentz_factor
Pluging and chugging yields a factor of about 1.5.

So if what you are looking for is using 10 ly from the stationary frame (say, measured before he left earth), he'd measure the distance traveled to be 6.67 ly and the time to get there to be 8.9 years.
 
  • #3
how can the distance ie 10 lightyears between two stars change?
 
  • #4
shamphys said:
how can the distance ie 10 lightyears between two stars change?
Because if you change your velocity, you will also change what "slice" of spacetime you think of as "space". If you're not moving relative to the stars, then what you think of as the space between them is a particular line through spacetime. When you are moving relative to the stars, then what you think of as the space between them is a different line. Both lines have endpoints on the world lines of the two stars, but they don't have the same endpoints.

You will find this sort of stuff much easier to understand if you learn about spacetime diagrams.
 
  • #5
will it not appear to the person when he gets to point b that he has traveled faster than light,thats what's bugging me ?

thanks for the replys i will dig deeper into spacetime/lorentz info

thanks
 
  • #6
Now comes a tricky part you should find interesting:
Lets assume the spaceship is traveling from Earth to a space station.
We can ask – how fast is that space station only 6.67 ly away coming towards us in the spaceship. The math is easy 6.67 ly distance divided by the 8.9 years Russ provided as our navigator gives 0.75c just as we planned before departing Earth 75% the speed of light.

But on the spaceship we can also ask “how fast are ‘we’ traveling?".
Well wrt the ship we are in we are not traveling at all we are stationary wrt that reference frame, so the question only makes sense by measuring our speed wrt to the Earth-Space Station reference frame. That can be a bit confusing because before departure we had planned on traveling 10 ly not the 6.67 ly the station is now away from use.
But as we pass Pluto we take a measure of a ten mile long distance marker to give our navigator a physical reading, so Russ can calibrate the gamma factor to be used for his near light speed trip planning. We advise Russ that the 10 mile marker measures only 6.67 miles long.
This actually makes sense – since the marker is reading as shorter me know that the actual length we will be covering, in and wrt to the Earth – Space Station frame, is still 10 ly. That length just fits into the distance we know measure to Space Station.

So for our own speed we must use the 10 ly length to be traversed in 8.9 years -- this gives our Proper Speed as 1.12c! Yep this is faster than light. This “Proper Speed” is important to our near light speed navigator. Remember although it can be “faster than light”; from our spaceship the fastest things we see are Earth going away from us and the space satiation coming toward us at 0.75c nothing is observed as moving FTL. “Proper Speed” is strictly how we measure our own speed, based on our time on the space ship, wrt some other reference frame.

For more detail you can look up "Proper Velocity" on wikipedia.
 
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  • #7
What happened is that he traveled from point A to point B. That's a coordinate independent fact. If you describe that using a coordinate system in which the stars are stationary, you will say that he traveled 10 light-years in 13.3 years. If you describe it using a coordinate system in which the rocket was stationary when it was going at full speed, you will say that he traveled 6.7 light-years in 8.9 years.

No matter which of the two coordinate systems you use, you won't have a reason to say that he traveled faster than light (10/13.3=6.7/8.9=0.75). It's only if you mix the two descriptions (never a good idea) that you get a weird result. The first coordinate system describes the distance as 10 light-years. The second coordinate system describes the time as 8.9 years. Divide that length with that time and you get a speed that's faster than light, but that doesn't mean anything since you got the numbers from two different coordinate systems.
 
  • #8
when he gets to point b , the distance between a and b will still be 10 light years and he traveled it in less than 10 years?
 
  • #9
shamphys said:
when he gets to point b , the distance between a and b will still be 10 light years in one coordinate system and he traveled it in less than 10 years in another coordinate system
This is exactly what I explained in my previous post. There's no coordinate system in which both of your statements are true.
 
  • #10
will it appear to the person that he has traveled faster than light, yes /no please
 
  • #11
shamphys said:
will it appear to the person that he has traveled faster than light, yes /no please
No, it won't.
 
  • #12
Look at it this way: Suppose when the traveler starts out, a light pulse is also sent from his starting point towards his destination. From any observer's point of view, including the traveler's, the light pulse arrives at the destination before the traveler does.
 
  • #13
russ_watters said:
shamphys said:
will it appear to the person that he has traveled faster than light, yes /no please
No, it won't.
Hold on there Russ.
Take a look at your post #2.
You made it clear that passengers and the clocks they bring with them will experience 8.9 years as the travel to the Station 10 ly away. So when they get off and check the local mile markers and look at their watches just how is it going to “appear” to them.

Post #2 made you navigator of this little trip so when one of the little old ladies starts to freak out over traveling FTL; we are putting you in charge of explaining that the “Proper Time” she recorded on her watch and the real distance she traversed may make it “Appear” she traveled FTL. At no time during the trip looking out of any window did she ever see anything anywhere move FTL. And the appearance of a FTL change in position is consistent with the scientific “Proper Velocity” you logged for this trip. It is just part of the reality of how SR works.
(Plus don't forget to tell them to reset their watches by using the local clocks - with the info we have we don't really know what that might be!)
 
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  • #14
RandallB said:
Hold on there Russ.
Take a look at your post #2.
You made it clear that passengers and the clocks they bring with them will experience 8.9 years as the travel to the Station 10 ly away. So when they get off and check the local mile markers and look at their watches just how is it going to “appear” to them.
I was quite clear - as were others - to say that there are two different distances being measured from two different frames. I said explicitly in the last sentence how far he traveled and how long it took. Again: you cannot take a distance measured from one frame and a time measured from another and calculate a speed.
Post #2 made you navigator of this little trip so when one of the little old ladies starts to freak out over traveling FTL; we are putting you in charge of explaining that the “Proper Time” she recorded on her watch and the real distance she traversed may make it “Appear” she traveled FTL. At no time during the trip looking out of any window did she ever see anything anywhere move FTL. And the appearance of a FTL change in position is consistent with the scientific “Proper Velocity” you logged for this trip. It is just part of the reality of how SR works.
I've never heard of someoneone taking a cross-country plane trip across time zones and exclaim 'wow, looks like we just traveled at 900 mph!. People understand different frames of reference in that context and never make such a calculation. That's all the problem is here.

If the OP is asking if it is possible to fool someone who doesn't understand Relativity into thinking he might have violated it, I'm sure it is. But I really think the OP is actually trying to understand Relativity and is simply missing the issue of mixing frames.
 
  • #15
Russ is obviously right. The answer to the question in #10 is definitely NO. There's no coordinate system such that the distance divided by the time is >c. It's 0.75c in both of the two frames that we would normally consider.

I like the example with the time zones. It's very clear. I tried to think of a good example myself yesterday, but gave up when I couldn't think of a good one in less than 10 seconds. :smile:
 
  • #16
shamphys said:
how can the distance ie 10 lightyears between two stars change?
Unless one or both of them accelerates the distance between them only depends on the velocity between them. But this only applies to flat spacetimes. In curved spacetimes the distance between two stars not only depends on the velocity between them but also on the resp. wordlines in spacetime. Think for instance about an apple falling from a tree or the expansion of spacetime.
 
  • #17
jtbell said:
Look at it this way: Suppose when the traveler starts out, a light pulse is also sent from his starting point towards his destination. From any observer's point of view, including the traveler's, the light pulse arrives at the destination before the traveler does.

from the light pulses point of view how long did it take to travell 10 lightyears?
 
  • #18
shamphys said:
from the light pulses point of view how long did it take to travell 10 lightyears?

Here's something you should consider before you ask that question:

If a distance in S is 10 ly, and you transform yourself to a frame S' that is moving very close to c relative to S, what would you measure the SAME distance to be in S'? If you can do this, then maybe you'll realize why your question isn't valid.

Zz.
 
  • #19
ZapperZ said:
Here's something you should consider before you ask that question:

If a distance in S is 10 ly, and you transform yourself to a frame S' that is moving very close to c relative to S, what would you measure the SAME distance to be in S'? If you can do this, then maybe you'll realize why your question isn't valid.

Zz.

S would be different if you measured it while traveling but when you get to point b it will be 10 lyrs


is it possible to travell great distances at close to the speed of light that would give you the appearance that you traveled faster than light??

yawn
 
  • #20
shamphys said:
S would be different if you measured it while traveling but when you get to point b it will be 10 lyrs

You do know that a "light-year" is a distance, don't you? So, if a length is 10 light-years in its proper frame S, and if S' is at, say 0.99c, what is that length observed in S'? You seem to not be able to figure out this straightforward question to understand why your question isn't valid here.

is it possible to travell great distances at close to the speed of light that would give you the appearance that you traveled faster than light??

yawn

"appearance"?

Either you can, or you can't. There's no "appearance" here. If you can work out that first part, you'll know that the answer is a definitive NO.

Zz.
 
  • #21
shamphys said:
is it possible to travell great distances at close to the speed of light that would give you the appearance that you traveled faster than light??
Russ and I both said no (and explained why) when you asked the same thing earlier in the thread. Did you not believe us since you're asking the same thing again?

shamphys said:
S would be different if you measured it while traveling but when you get to point b it will be 10 lyrs
I have also explained a couple of times why this is irrelevant, and I'm guessing Russ did too. (I didn't read every word in his replies to you, so I don't know exactly what he said). What kind of answer do you want if those explanations weren't enough?

If you didn't understand our explanations, that's OK, but it would be better to tell us what part of the explanations you had difficulties with than to just repeat your questions.
 
  • #22
ZapperZ said:
You do know that a "light-year" is a distance, don't you? So, if a length is 10 light-years in its proper frame S, and if S' is at, say 0.99c, what is that length observed in S'? You seem to not be able to figure out this straightforward question to understand why your question isn't valid here.



"appearance"?

Either you can, or you can't. There's no "appearance" here. If you can work out that first part, you'll know that the answer is a definitive NO.

Zz.

will the watch on the person show that he has taken less than or more than 10 years to travell?


when he gets to point B will the distance between point B and A still be 10lyrs??


could you answer these 2 points please without going of on a tangent i am new to this


thanks
 
  • #23
all i want to know is if you travel a couple of thousand lyrs at close to the speed of light that you wouldn't die of old age before you got there


"i don't think you can travel FLT"


or is my understanding of this wrong?
 
  • #24
shamphys said:
will the watch on the person show that he has taken less than or more than 10 years to travell?
Less.
when he gets to point B will the distance between point B and A still be 10lyrs??
If he measures the distance he traveled, he will measure it to be less. If he measures the distance again when he arrives and stops, it will be 10 lyr.
could you answer these 2 points please without going of on a tangent i am new to this...
You appear to be trying to push the conversation in a particular direction with a particular line of reasoning. We are not going off on a tangent, we are explaining to you why your line of reasoning is faulty.
 
  • #25
shamphys said:
will the watch on the person show that he has taken less than or more than 10 years to travell?


when he gets to point B will the distance between point B and A still be 10lyrs??


could you answer these 2 points please without going of on a tangent i am new to this


thanks

shamphys said:
all i want to know is if you travel a couple of thousand lyrs at close to the speed of light that you wouldn't die of old age before you got there


"i don't think you can travel FLT"


or is my understanding of this wrong?
I have to ask: Why do you keep asking the same questions over and over, after they have been answered many times?

The answers are (still):

LESS than 10 years.

YES, the distance will still be 10 light-years in the frame where points A and B are at rest, and NO, it won't be 10 light-years (and has never been) in the frame where the rocket was at rest during most of the trip. (There's no "absolute" answer to this question. The answer depends on what frame we're talking about. Actually the question is ill-defined since you didn't specify a frame in the question).

NO, you can't, but you can travel to a star that's 10000 light-years away in Earth's rest frame without dying of old age. Those two don't contradict each other even though at first glance it looks like they do. The reason for that can be found in most of my posts earlier in this thread.

Edit: Just testing if I can still edit this (more than 9 hours after I wrote it). Apparently I can.
 
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  • #26
shamphys said:
all i want to know is if you travel a couple of thousand lyrs at close to the speed of light that you wouldn't die of old age before you got there
The question is ill-defined if you don't specify in which frame the distance between the starting point and the destination is 2000 light years. In the frame where the distance is 2000 light years, any ship will take more than 2000 years to get there, but in this frame the clocks on the ship will be running slow so they can tick a lot less than 2000 years over the course of the trip. In any frame where it takes less than 2000 years to get between starting point and destination, it's because the distance between starting point and destination is less than 2000 light years due to Lorentz contraction. No matter which frame you choose, no objects move faster than one light year per year when their speed is measured in that frame.
 
  • #27
russ_watters said:
I was quite clear - as were others - to say that there are two different distances being measured from two different frames. I said explicitly in the last sentence how far he traveled and how long it took. Again: you cannot take a distance measured from one frame and a time measured from another and calculate a speed.

I've never heard of someoneone taking a cross-country plane trip across time zones and exclaim 'wow, looks like we just traveled at 900 mph!.
People understand different frames of reference in that context and never make such a calculation.
That's all the problem is here.
Non-sense,
I never suggested they calculate anything of the sort – only that traversing 10ly in only 8.9 years gives the appearance of traveling FTL.

If you "cannot take a distance measured from one frame and a time measured from another and calculate a speed"
Please explain what are scientist doing when the define “Proper Velocity” and when and where would they use it if not here?
.
After working with several space-stations using light signals and radio communications to meticulously synchronize all Space-Station Clocks and Install Mile Markers at each space station. You’re suggesting that after travel like this you would ignore the mile markers you find at landing and instead rely only on some kind of in flight calculations to recalculate the distance you covered? (I don’t do that when I fly from Chicago to Columbus I look at the mile marks, just as I use my stop watch to measure elapsed time, your analogy of Time Zones has absolutely nothing to do with synchronization.)

What is your plan, everyone traveling with you is measuring the same elapsed time on their watches, 8.9 years does not justify traveling 10 ly. But the darn “10 ly from Earth” Mile Maker is right there at the station for all to see. For appearances sake do you ‘correct’ the mile marker with a 6.6 and get in a fight with the Station Master? (He already had one arrested for defacing his sign with 5 ly after getting off a ship traveling faster than you.)
Do plan to reset all their station clocks to your personal proper “time zone” as well?

Seeing the mile maker and measuring your proper elapsed time are directly observable facts. Denying them and not recognizing appearances is more irresponsible than failing to explain apparent FTL trip.

The appearance is real and is totally explainable with nothing moving FTL!
But you need understand SR, Simultaneity, and Proper Velocity (see Wiki) to explain it. And if you do not understand all three of those; then you have no business being the Near Light Speed Navigator – we’ll try to find you a job in the kitchen.
 
  • #28
RandallB said:
If you "cannot take a distance measured from one frame and a time measured from another and calculate a speed"
Please explain what are scientist doing when the define “Proper Velocity” and when and where would they use it if not here?
Where have you seen scientists defining a "proper velocity"? Can you provide a link or a reference to a book by a physicist?

edit: never mind, found a wikipedia article with some references here. But I don't see anything in the definition that says the "dx" in dx/dtau must be measured in the object's current rest frame as you suggest--in other words, if I travel from Earth to Alpha Centauri and then come to rest there, there's nothing that says I should define my proper velocity in terms of the distance in the Earth/Alpha centauri rest frame as opposed to some other frame.
 
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  • #29
RandallB said:
Non-sense,
I never suggested they calculate anything of the sort – only that traversing 10ly in only 8.9 years gives the appearance of traveling FTL.
But there's no frame in which the rocket moves 10 light-years in 8.9 years. There's a frame where it moves 10 light-years in 13.3 years, and a frame where it moves 6.7 light-years in 8.9 years. The speed is 0.75c in both of them.

RandallB said:
...your analogy of Time Zones has absolutely nothing to do with synchronization.
The point of Russ's analogy was that if you calculate the elapsed time by taking the arrival time in one coordinate system minus the departure time in another coordinate system, you get the wrong result. It illustrates why it's a bad idea to use numbers from different coordinate systems in a calculation.

"10 light-years" is the distance in one coordinate system, and "8.9" years is the time in another. Dividing them to get a speed makes no more sense than calculating the time you spent on the plane the way I described above (for exactly the same reason).
 
  • #30
JesseM said:
edit: never mind, found a wikipedia article with some references here. But I don't see anything in the definition that says the "dx" in dx/dtau must be measured in the object's current rest frame as you suggest--in other words, if I travel from Earth to Alpha Centauri and then come to rest there, there's nothing that says I should define my proper velocity in terms of the distance in the Earth/Alpha centauri rest frame as opposed to some other frame.
In the context you are using here "Proper" values are defined in Earth/Alpha Centauri rest frame not the Traveler frame. All other frames would see the same "Proper Time" which would = the real time the traveler would see pass but very different than the time observed in that frame.
But each frame would define a different "Proper Distance" traversed in that frame; so of course the "Proper Velocity” of the traveler would be different in different frames.
Obviously it is important to keep track of these values based on which frame your considering as you work out collisions of high speed colliding from opposite directions. Not something we use in everyday life.
 
  • #31
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  • #32
shamphys
I assume you mean the statement in wiki:
" ... a constant 1 g acceleration would permit humans to travel as far as light has been able to travel since the big bang (some 13.7 billion light years) in one human lifetime. "
Would "appear" as a FTL speed or "change in location" - just remember that in SR the traveler still does not see a local FTL event at any time - and you will begin to understand what Einstein was saying with SR.
 
  • #33
RandallB said:
shamphys
I assume you mean the statement in wiki:
" ... a constant 1 g acceleration would permit humans to travel as far as light has been able to travel since the big bang (some 13.7 billion light years) in one human lifetime. "
Would "appear" as a FTL speed or "change in location" - just remember that in SR the traveler still does not see a local FTL event at any time - and you will begin to understand what Einstein was saying with SR.


i mean that if you could travel at very close to the speed of light(ignoring the acceleration problem for the moment another thread for another day)that you could travel very great distances within a heartbeat and this would give you the "appearance" that you traveled faster than light

can i say again i don't believe you can travel at the speed light or faster


also any chance of answer for my question about how long it takes for a pulse of light to travel 10 lyrs ,from the pulse of lights point of view
 
  • #34
shamphys said:
also any chance of answer for my question about how long it takes for a pulse of light to travel 10 lyrs ,from the pulse of lights point of view
In relativity when physicists talk about an object's "point of view" they mean what's happening in the object's inertial rest frame, but light doesn't have an inertial rest frame of its own. Inertial frames are supposed to be defined by networks of rulers and synchronized clocks at rest in that frame, but it's impossible for rulers and clocks to be accelerated to the speed of light, and even if you consider the limit as they approach the speed of light, the rulers' length would approach zero due to Lorentz contraction and the clocks would approach being completely frozen due to time dilation, so you couldn't construct a sensible coordinate system out of them. One more reason that light can't have its own inertial rest frame is that one of the fundamental postulates of relativity is that the laws of physics should be the same in every inertial frame, but light can never be at rest in the rest frame of any object moving slower than light, so giving light its own rest frame would violate this postulate.
 

FAQ: Traveling 10 Lightyears at 75% Speed - Time & Average Speed

What is the concept of traveling 10 lightyears at 75% speed?

Traveling 10 lightyears at 75% speed refers to the hypothetical scenario of a spacecraft traveling a distance of 10 lightyears (approximately 5.88 trillion miles) at a speed that is 75% of the speed of light, or 224,000 miles per second. This scenario is often used as an example to explore the concepts of time dilation and average speed in space travel.

How long would it take to travel 10 lightyears at 75% speed?

According to the laws of special relativity, time is relative to the observer's frame of reference. Therefore, the perceived time for the spacecraft to travel 10 lightyears at 75% speed would be different for the observer on the spacecraft compared to an observer on Earth. However, from the perspective of an observer on Earth, it would take approximately 13.33 years for the spacecraft to travel 10 lightyears at 75% speed.

What is time dilation in the context of this scenario?

Time dilation is a phenomenon predicted by Einstein's theory of special relativity, which states that time passes slower for objects moving at high speeds. In the scenario of traveling 10 lightyears at 75% speed, time dilation would occur for the spacecraft, meaning that time would pass slower for the astronauts on board compared to an observer on Earth.

How does average speed factor into this scenario?

Average speed is the total distance traveled divided by the total time taken to travel that distance. In the scenario of traveling 10 lightyears at 75% speed, the average speed would be 75% of the speed of light. However, due to time dilation, the perceived average speed would be different for the observer on Earth compared to the astronauts on board the spacecraft.

What are some potential challenges of traveling 10 lightyears at 75% speed?

There are several challenges that would arise in attempting to travel 10 lightyears at 75% speed. These include the immense amount of energy and resources required to accelerate to and maintain such high speeds, the potential for collisions with interstellar objects, and the effects of time dilation on the astronauts' bodies and equipment. Additionally, the spacecraft would need to be equipped with advanced technology to protect against radiation and other hazards in space.

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