SIMULTANEITY:
At
,
events A and B occur
in reference frame O at
s,
xA =
150 m and
s,
xB =
210 m, respectively.
Where (xA') and when (tA') do these events occur
in reference frame O' if
(a)
O' moves at a velocity of 0.6
c in the positive x direction relative to O?
(b)
O moves at a velocity of -0.6
c in the positive x direction relative to O'?
(c)
Could these two events be simultaneous
in some other reference frame?
If so, what must be the velocity of that frame relative to O?
2.
RELATIVISTIC RUBBER BAND:
A certain piece of elastic can be stretched to
twice its unstretched length before it breaks.
At time t=0 it is at rest in the unstretched state,
laid out straight along the x axis.
Thereafter all parts of it are accelerated longitudinally
(in the x direction)
with a constant acceleration of one ``gee" (a=9.81 m/s2)
as measured in the lab frame
(the frame where it was originally at rest).
At what time t does the elastic break?
3.
VELOCITY TRANSFORMATION:
An observer on Earth observes two spacecraft moving in the
same direction toward the Earth.
Spacecraft A has a speed of
0.5
c and spacecraft B has a speed of
0.8
c in the Earth's frame.
What is the speed of spacecraft A as measured by
an observer in spacecraft B?
4.
TWIN ``PARADOX":
Frank and Mary are twins.
Mary jumps on a spaceship
and goes to
a hypothetical star 8 lightyears [ly] away
and returns.
She travels at a speed of
u =
0.8
c with respect to the Earth in both directions
and spends a negligible fraction of her time
accelerating and decelerating.
Mary sends out a radio signal to Earth every
year
(her time). Frank also sends out a radio signal every
year
(his time) to the spaceship.
(a)
How many signals does Mary receive from Frank
before she turns around at
the other star?
(b)
At what time (Earth time) does the frequency at which
Frank receives signals suddenly change?
How many signals has he received by this time?
(c)
What is the total number of signals each twin receives
from the other?
(d)
How much time does the trip take, according to each twin?
(e)
How much time does each twin claim the other twin
will have measured for the trip?
Who is right?
Hint: see diagram and table below.
Figure for Twin ``Paradox":
The trajectories (worldlines) of Frank, Mary and their light signals
are shown in Frank's reference frame. (Frank's worldline is just a
vertical line at x=0.) The slopes of Mary's worldlines are
.
The worldlines of all light paths
(dotted lines) have slope .
As viewed by Frank, Mary's
clock is slow by a factor
throughout the trip; thus the
times at which she sends signals are more than one
year
apart in Frank's reference frame. Note that one always has to
choose one reference frame in which to draw all events!
T&RTABLE 2.1 Twin Paradox Analysis
after A. French, Special Relativity, p. 158
(W.W. Norton, New York, 1968)