- #1
Strange Quark
- 6
- 0
Here is one that's been bugging me a lot:
Observer A is zooming along in a very fast car at 0.995c. The "rest length" of the car is about 6 meters. In front of the car is a deep ditch with a "rest length" of 2 meters across. The car has big tires and could drive over the ditch under normal highway speeds.
Observer B is standing beside the ditch watching the car as it zooms by.
Due to relativistic length contraction, observer A observes the ditch in front of him to be much less than 1 meter - he should barely even feel the bump.
But to observer B, the ditch is still 2m, but he observes that the car is much shorter than 2 meters, and will inevitably fall into the ditch.
What happens to observer A? Does he make it across? Does observer B see him magically float across thin air violating Einstein's postulate: "The laws of physics shall be the same no matter what the frame of reference"?
Good luck ...
Observer A is zooming along in a very fast car at 0.995c. The "rest length" of the car is about 6 meters. In front of the car is a deep ditch with a "rest length" of 2 meters across. The car has big tires and could drive over the ditch under normal highway speeds.
Observer B is standing beside the ditch watching the car as it zooms by.
Due to relativistic length contraction, observer A observes the ditch in front of him to be much less than 1 meter - he should barely even feel the bump.
But to observer B, the ditch is still 2m, but he observes that the car is much shorter than 2 meters, and will inevitably fall into the ditch.
What happens to observer A? Does he make it across? Does observer B see him magically float across thin air violating Einstein's postulate: "The laws of physics shall be the same no matter what the frame of reference"?
Good luck ...