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Posted

The total energy of a massive object tends towards infinity as you approach c. At c it's undefined. At speeds above c, the energy is an imaginary value.

Posted (edited)
  On 3/6/2016 at 8:34 PM, swansont said:

The total energy of a massive object tends towards infinity as you approach c. At c it's undefined. At speeds above c, the energy is an imaginary value.

That is a start I suppose. Something is moving and you add some more energy it moves faster why can't this go on forever?

Are you having to push the additional energy as well as the rest mass energy as you go faster? Is that why "the total energy of a massive object tends towards infinity as you approach c" is any reason to be a restriction?

Do we say that kinetic energy has no mass, the kinetic energy of an object does not add to its gravitational mass, but it appears to affect its inertia. But wasn't it impossible to separate inertial mass from gravitational mass?

Edited by Robittybob1
Posted
  On 3/6/2016 at 8:53 PM, Robittybob1 said:

That is a start I suppose. Something is moving and you add some more energy it moves faster why can't this go on forever?

Are you having to push the additional energy as well as the rest mass energy as you go faster? Is that why "the total energy of a massive object tends towards infinity as you approach c" is any reason to be a restriction?Do we say that kinetic energy has no mass, the kinetic energy of an object does not add to its gravitational mass, but it appears to affect its inertia. But wasn't it impossible to separate inertial mass from gravitational mass?

It's not an issue of mass. Even for Galilean kinematics (KE = 1/2 mv^2) you have diminishing returns in increasing speed for each increment of energy increase. For relativity, it's a different dependence, so the speed increase is incrementally even smaller. another consequence of c being invariant.

Posted
  On 3/6/2016 at 10:35 PM, swansont said:

It's not an issue of mass. Even for Galilean kinematics (KE = 1/2 mv^2) you have diminishing returns in increasing speed for each increment of energy increase. For relativity, it's a different dependence, so the speed increase is incrementally even smaller. another consequence of c being invariant.

"diminishing returns in increasing speed for each increment of energy increase"

and

"The speed increase is incrementally even smaller". Hit the nail on the head there.

So can we explain it all just with mass and velocity?

Posted

You don't even need mass. One result of special relativity is that we find speed does not add linearly in the way we are used to (at our normal humdrum pace).

 

For example, if you are travelling past the Earth at 0.5c and you fire a rocket ahead of you at 0.5c then, from my perspective on Earth, I will see the rocket moving at 0.8c (rather than at c).

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/relativ/einvel2.html

 

This just comes from applying the Lorentz transform.

Posted (edited)
  On 3/7/2016 at 12:33 AM, Strange said:

You don't even need mass. One result of special relativity is that we find speed does not add linearly in the way we are used to (at our normal humdrum pace).

 

For example, if you are travelling past the Earth at 0.5c and you fire a rocket ahead of you at 0.5c then, from my perspective on Earth, I will see the rocket moving at 0.8c (rather than at c).

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/relativ/einvel2.html

 

This just comes from applying the Lorentz transform.

I've been a bit amused lately where they add speeds recorded by different people.

Imaging if the other craft is an alien and they don't speak our language, so we can't communicate with them, how do you describe what is happening then?

"For example, if you are travelling past the Earth at 0.5c and you fire a rocket ahead of you at 0.5c then, from my perspective on Earth, I will see the rocket moving at 0.8c (rather than at c).

becomes:

For example, if you see an alien mothership travelling past the Earth at 0.5c and it fires a rocket ahead at 0.5c then, from my perspective on Earth, I will see the rocket moving at 0.8c (rather than at c)." Is that still true?

 

I think the velocity of the rocket will be c therefore the rocket must be made from photons. Will it look like the light rocket moves ahead of the mothership at 0.5 c?

Edited by Robittybob1
Posted
  On 3/7/2016 at 1:46 AM, Robittybob1 said:

Is that still true?

 

Of course. (I struggle to see why the idea of aliens is relevant. Also, not that the speed of the rocket is specified relative to the craft firing it [sorry if I didn't make that clear].)

 

  Quote
I think the velocity of the rocket will be c

 

And you are wrong.

Posted (edited)
  On 3/7/2016 at 8:01 AM, Strange said:

 

Of course. (I struggle to see why the idea of aliens is relevant. Also, not that the speed of the rocket is specified relative to the craft firing it [sorry if I didn't make that clear].)

 

 

And you are wrong.

In your example who is measuring the speeds? Are they being measured by two different people? Are you sure the rocket can't go at c, it is made of light after all in my case.

If the rocket is made from light it will travel at c (the speed of light) and if the mothership is doing 0.5 c the light front of the rocket must be 0.5 c ahead of the rocket. All my measurements are from the friendly position, for I don't trust the aliens.

On board the mothership the aliens think their light rocket is traveling at the speed of light, from their perspective the position I am at is passing them at 1/2 the speed of light. Their conventional rocket that does 1/2 the speed of light is moving at half the speed of the light rocket.

From my perspective the conventional rocket is traveling 0.8 c as you say (I'll take your word on that).

Edited by Robittybob1
Posted
  On 3/7/2016 at 10:23 AM, Robittybob1 said:

In your example who is measuring the speeds? Are they being measured by two different people? Are you sure the rocket can't go at c, it is made of light after all in my case.

 

 

Then it's not traveling at 0.5c. It's a non-sequitur. A "rocket made of photons" travels at c in all frames, and you would not observe it unless it collided with your eyes or whatever you used to view it. So it's a complete non-starter for a discussion.

 

We're discussing relativity here, not science fiction.

Posted

The idea of Strange, but a bit simplified:

 

The speed of light is the same for all observers. A rocket flies by, and sends a lightbeam in the direction of its flight. So the astronaut measures a speed of c in the direction of his flight. I see the lightbeam also with a speed of c. If the rocket would be faster than c, I would see the astronaut measuring the light beam behind him, but for the astronaut it would be in front of him. That is logically impossible, so I will see the rocket always with a velocity lower than c.

Posted
  On 3/7/2016 at 10:23 AM, Robittybob1 said:

In your example who is measuring the speeds? Are they being measured by two different people?

 

Sorry if that wasn't clear. The scenario is:

 

You (or an alien) are on a spaceship which is moving relative to Earth / me at 0.5c. (Note that the implausible numbers have been chosen to make the difference clear and the arithmetic simple). You / alien fire a rocket (torpedo, rescue shuttle, landing craft, whatever) ahead of you at a speed of 0.5c relative to your spaceship.

 

I see your spaceship moving at 0.5c and the rocket travelling at 0.8c.

 

If we were talking old-fashioned physics with trains and baseballs, then if you were on a train going past at 40 MPH and tossed a ball forwards at 10 MPH then I (standing on the platform) would see the ball moving at 50MPH. But if I could measure incredibly accurately, I would see it was a really tiny bit slower than that because velocities do not add linearly.

 

Is that better?

 

  Quote

 

If the rocket is made from light it will travel at c (the speed of light) and if the mothership is doing 0.5 c the light front of the rocket must be 0.5 c ahead of the rocket.

 

Your "rocket" is a beam of light. Different rules apply here. You would measure the light moving away from you at c. I would see the light moving at c as well.

 

  Quote

 

(I'll take your word on that)

 

You don't have to take my word. The arithmetic is very simple, nothing more complicated than division and square roots.

Posted
  On 3/7/2016 at 10:32 AM, swansont said:

 

 

Then it's not traveling at 0.5c. It's a non-sequitur. A "rocket made of photons" travels at c in all frames, and you would not observe it unless it collided with your eyes or whatever you used to view it. So it's a complete non-starter for a discussion.

 

We're discussing relativity here, not science fiction.

That 0.5c was 0.5c ahead of the mothership which already doing 0.5c. So the light rocket is definitely going at c in all frames (I'm sure I made that clear). A light rocket could be like laser gun.

  On 3/7/2016 at 10:58 AM, Strange said:

 

Sorry if that wasn't clear. The scenario is:

 

You (or an alien) are on a spaceship which is moving relative to Earth / me at 0.5c. (Note that the implausible numbers have been chosen to make the difference clear and the arithmetic simple). You / alien fire a rocket (torpedo, rescue shuttle, landing craft, whatever) ahead of you at a speed of 0.5c relative to your spaceship.

 

I see your spaceship moving at 0.5c and the rocket travelling at 0.8c.

 

If we were talking old-fashioned physics with trains and baseballs, then if you were on a train going past at 40 MPH and tossed a ball forwards at 10 MPH then I (standing on the platform) would see the ball moving at 50MPH. But if I could measure incredibly accurately, I would see it was a really tiny bit slower than that because velocities do not add linearly.

 

Is that better?

 

 

Your "rocket" is a beam of light. Different rules apply here. You would measure the light moving away from you at c. I would see the light moving at c as well.

 

 

You don't have to take my word. The arithmetic is very simple, nothing more complicated than division and square roots.

Yes that is clear, and I agree. But in my case when the mothership fires the light rocket, how fast relative to the mothership do I see the light front moving? The mothership is doing 0.5c and the light is doing c, so it seems that I would see the craft going half the speed of the light front. Surely?

Posted
  On 3/7/2016 at 11:10 AM, Robittybob1 said:

I'm sure I made that clear

 

 

That you are sure is the problem in a nutshell.

Posted
  On 3/7/2016 at 11:02 AM, Mordred said:

if ship a travelling at 0.5 c fires a rocket at 0.5 c as seen from the ship the rocket will be seen to move at 0.8c. from an external observer.

 

use your relativistic velocity addition formula

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velocity-addition_formula

Yes but if it fires a laser type weapon how fast is the light front moving as seen by the external observer? So is it obvious to the external observer that the craft is going at half the speed of the light front? That is what 0.5c must mean surely?

Posted (edited)

No, you probably didnt see my post above

 

  On 3/7/2016 at 11:02 AM, Mordred said:

if ship a travelling at 0.5 c fires a rocket at 0.5 c as seen from the ship the rocket will be seen to move at 0.8c. from an external observer.

 

use your relativistic velocity addition formula

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velocity-addition_formula

 

 

lets take another example

 

spacecraft is moving at 0.9 c fires a rocket at 0.9c as seen from spacecraft. An external observer will measure 0.9999494975001263 c

 

no matter how close the rocket and craft is to c the addition will always be less than c


  On 3/7/2016 at 11:15 AM, Robittybob1 said:

Yes but if it fires a laser type weapon how fast is the light front moving as seen by the external observer? So is it obvious to the external observer that the craft is going at half the speed of the light front? That is what 0.5c must mean surely?

 

 

a laser always travels at c in a vacuum to all observers, observer in the craft will see the laser move at c and so will an external observer. yes an external observer will still measure the craft at 0.5c

Edited by Mordred
Posted
  On 3/7/2016 at 11:11 AM, swansont said:

 

 

That you are sure is the problem in a nutshell.

in #7 I said "Will it look like the light rocket moves ahead of the mothership at 0.5 c?" That is not from the perspective of the mothership but the perspective of the external observer.

  On 3/7/2016 at 11:17 AM, Mordred said:

....

 

a laser always travels at c in a vacuum to all observers observer in the craft will see the laser move at c and so will an external observer

Yes I know that, but how fast will the laser wavefront move compared to the mothership from the perspective of the external observer?

Posted
  On 3/7/2016 at 11:23 AM, Robittybob1 said:

in #7 I said "Will it look like the light rocket moves ahead of the mothership at 0.5 c?" That is not from the perspective of the mothership but the perspective of the external observer.

 

 

That was after your erroneous conclusion that the rocket moving 0.5c relative to the mothership (moving at 0.5c relative to earth) must be moving at c.

 

Your example is anything but clear, for it is not based on a proper application of physics.

Posted (edited)
  On 3/7/2016 at 11:29 AM, swansont said:

 

 

That was after your erroneous conclusion that the rocket moving 0.5c relative to the mothership (moving at 0.5c relative to earth) must be moving at c.

 

Your example is anything but clear, for it is not based on a proper application of physics.

Sorry about that. In #7 I was varying Strange's statement and I deliberately gave the wrong answer (erroneous conclusion) , but immediately asked if it was right. I was hoping by doing that it would stimulate a degree of discussion, which it has, but not along the lines I was hoping for.

Edited by Robittybob1
Posted

see my edit last post

 

  On 3/7/2016 at 11:23 AM, Robittybob1 said:

Yes I know that, but how fast will the laser wavefront move compared to the mothership from the perspective of the external observer?

 

I caught that question while you were posting

Posted (edited)
  On 3/7/2016 at 11:17 AM, Mordred said:

...

a laser always travels at c in a vacuum to all observers, observer in the craft will see the laser move at c and so will an external observer. yes an external observer will still measure the craft at 0.5c

Yes sounds right. So the craft is 0.5c slower than the light front. Yes that is what I was getting at in #7. For I was trying to see if these problems can be worked out without having to communicate with the other craft.

Edited by Robittybob1
Posted
  On 3/7/2016 at 11:45 AM, Robittybob1 said:

For I was trying to see if these problems can be worked out without having to communicate with the other craft.

 

Why do you need to communicate?

 

  On 3/7/2016 at 11:23 AM, Robittybob1 said:

Yes I know that, but how fast will the laser wavefront move compared to the mothership from the perspective of the external observer?

 

The question doesn't really make sense. The speed of light isn't relative to anything. But I suppose you can consider the difference in speed between the light (i.e. c) and the craft (0.5 c) which is (rather painfully obviously) 0.5c.

Posted (edited)
  On 3/7/2016 at 12:16 PM, Strange said:

The speed of light isn't relative to anything. .

Semantics just or can you say rather that the speed of light is relative to everything equally ?

 

It seems that the speed of light is just one example of the speed limit of everything,isn't it?

 

Do we need a speed limit of some kind just so as not to break causality and does light (and massless particles )just fill that slot?

Edited by geordief

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