Sarahisme Posted August 10, 2005 Posted August 10, 2005 hi all, here is the question, i will post my answer in the next post: Sarah
Sarahisme Posted August 10, 2005 Author Posted August 10, 2005 for part (a) use the equation for adding relativistic velocites together [math] u=\frac{u^{'}+v^{'}}{1+\frac{u^{'}v^{'}}{c^{2}}} [/math] So u = the speed of one ship relative to the other. [math] u=\frac{0.6c+0.6c}{1+\frac{(0.6c)^{2}}{c^{2}}} =\frac{1.2c}{1.36} =0.88c = 0.9c [/math] oh by the way, how do you make an equation go to the next line using latex? eg. u=42x = ... =.... etc.
Sarahisme Posted August 10, 2005 Author Posted August 10, 2005 for part (b) again use the equation for adding relativistic velocites together [math] u=\frac{u^{'}+v^{'}}{1+\frac{u^{'}v^{'}}{c^{2}}} [/math] So u = the speed of one ship relative to the other. [math] u=\frac{30000+30000}{1+\frac{(30000)^{2}}{c^{2}}} =\frac{60000}{1\times10^{-8}} =59999.9994(m/s) =6.0000\times10^{4} [/math] and the final answer should be too 5 sig. figures, as the information given in the question (for part b) is to 5 sig. figs. so what did people think of all that? i am pretty damn sure its right!
timo Posted August 10, 2005 Posted August 10, 2005 [math] \begin{array}{rcl} a &=& b + c \\ &=& (b + d) - (d-c) \end{array} [/math] Source: \begin{array}{rcl} a &=& b + c \\ &=& (b + d) - (d-c) \end{array} Your answers look good. Especially part b) which gives the classical result as one would expect at such low velocities.
Sarahisme Posted August 11, 2005 Author Posted August 11, 2005 [math] \begin{array}{rcl} a &=& b + c \\ &=& (b + d) - (d-c) \end{array} [/math] Source: \begin{array}{rcl} a &=& b + c \\ &=& (b + d) - (d-c) \end{array} . what this about?
DQW Posted August 11, 2005 Posted August 11, 2005 It's about this : oh by the way' date=' how do you make an equation go to the next line using latex?[/quote']
Sarahisme Posted August 15, 2005 Author Posted August 15, 2005 oh so you have to have all this array stuff...?
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