- #1
Kaguro
- 221
- 57
- TL;DR Summary
- x' = gamma*(x-vt). It infers that distance of event point is farther the faster you are.
The Lorentz tranformations are:
##x' = \gamma (x-vt) ##
##t' = \gamma(t - \frac{vx}{c^2})##
Consider an event (x,t) happening in S frame. Let S' frame be moving w.r.t. S frame along x direction with speed v whose origins coincide at t=0.
We find that the new coordinates of this event are (x',t').
Classically, x'=x-vt. It makes sense. Time is absolute and so the more you wait (in S'), the closer it appears to the origin of the moving frame.In Relativity, this amount is increased by a factor ##\gamma##.
Say the event happens at (x,0)
So, ##x' = \gamma x##
What's the purpose of this? What happens physically here?
Then considering time,
t' = ##\gamma(0 - vx/c^2)##
It's negative. Why negative?
Please help me guide through this. I already studied STR many times and still have not been able to visualize what actually happens..
##x' = \gamma (x-vt) ##
##t' = \gamma(t - \frac{vx}{c^2})##
Consider an event (x,t) happening in S frame. Let S' frame be moving w.r.t. S frame along x direction with speed v whose origins coincide at t=0.
We find that the new coordinates of this event are (x',t').
Classically, x'=x-vt. It makes sense. Time is absolute and so the more you wait (in S'), the closer it appears to the origin of the moving frame.In Relativity, this amount is increased by a factor ##\gamma##.
Say the event happens at (x,0)
So, ##x' = \gamma x##
What's the purpose of this? What happens physically here?
Then considering time,
t' = ##\gamma(0 - vx/c^2)##
It's negative. Why negative?
Please help me guide through this. I already studied STR many times and still have not been able to visualize what actually happens..