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b2386
Sep25-06, 11:21 PM
Hi all,

Just a quick question.

Suppose I am traveling at relativistic speeds. An object moving with respect to my frame has undergone spatial contraction. In my frame, does the object's density increase?

pervect
Sep25-06, 11:30 PM
Yes, the density does increase.

Energy density, the sort used in the stress-energy tensor, increases by a factor of rougly gamma^2, gamma = 1/sqrt(1-(v/c)^2). This happens by a combination of length contraction and the fact that relativisticly moving objects have kinetic energies on the order of their rest mass.

b2386
Sep26-06, 12:00 AM
OK, let's change the situation slightly.

Suppose I am traveling at relativistic speeds. A quasar moving with respect to my frame has undergone spatial contraction. In my frame, does the quasar become a black hole if it is traveling at sufficient speed?

jtbell
Sep26-06, 12:47 AM
(link) If you go too fast do you become a black hole? (http://www.physics.adelaide.edu.au/~dkoks/Faq/Relativity/BlackHoles/black_fast.html)