Distance between fast moving objects

  • Thread starter Chuck37
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In summary: You are using special relativity when you are using the time measure to compare different frames of reference.
  • #1
Chuck37
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The equations for length contraction are clear when it comes to something like a ruler flying past, or equivalently, two objects flying in formation. I'm not sure how to think about distance to a moving object, or between two moving objects. Is there an easy way to think about this?

Two examples for discussion purposes: (1) I'm stationary and an object is moving rapidly away. What does relativity do in terms of my perception of his distance vs. time? Maybe I'm using laser pulses to measure range. (2) I'm in a third frame looking at two objects moving apart at high speed. How do I perceive their separation?

Thanks for any pointers.
 
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  • #2
Length contraction only really happens because you have some extended object and you're looking at the distance between both ends of the object. So you can't really see anything of the sort with the distance to such an object.

Similarly, if two objects are moving apart, it's not immediately clear to me that you could talk about contraction of that distance, either, because they don't constitute a single extended object. It's possible to analyze this case mathematically; it just doesn't fit the simple case of an extended object that's moving and would obviously length contract.
 
  • #3
Muphrid said:
Length contraction only really happens because you have some extended object and you're looking at the distance between both ends of the object. So you can't really see anything of the sort with the distance to such an object.

Similarly, if two objects are moving apart, it's not immediately clear to me that you could talk about contraction of that distance, either, because they don't constitute a single extended object. It's possible to analyze this case mathematically; it just doesn't fit the simple case of an extended object that's moving and would obviously length contract.

Thanks for the reply. There must be something here, but maybe it's too complicated to just apply a simple equation. Try this thought experiment. Two objects are flying in formation at 0.5c. Surely I can apply the length contraction equation to find the difference in how each of them perceives their separation and how someone in a stationary frame perceives it, right? Now change one guy to 0.49999c. The answer will be close, but not exactly the same. how would I compute the new answer?
 
  • #4
First, from a practical point of view, you can measure distance from yourself (an inertial observer) using radar. The total there-and-back time gives you twice the distance (when you multiply by c), and the time at which that distance is valid is halfway between transmission and reception of the radar pulse.

Secondly, the reliable way to change coordinates from one inertial observer to another is to use the Lorentz transform[tex]
\begin{align}
t' &= \gamma (t - vx/c^2) \\
x' &= \gamma (x - vt)
\end{align}
[/tex]where[tex]
\gamma = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1 - v^2 / c^2}}
[/tex]One you've worked out distances and times in one frame you can use the above equations to convert to another frame. For example, consider[tex]
\begin{align}
x_A &= 0.5 \, c t \\
x_B &= L + 0.49999 \, c t
\end{align}
[/tex]
 
  • #5
DrGreg said:
First, from a practical point of view, you can measure distance from yourself (an inertial observer) using radar. The total there-and-back time gives you twice the distance (when you multiply by c), and the time at which that distance is valid is halfway between transmission and reception of the radar pulse.

Secondly, the reliable way to change coordinates from one inertial observer to another is to use the Lorentz transform[tex]
\begin{align}
t' &= \gamma (t - vx/c^2) \\
x' &= \gamma (x - vt)
\end{align}
[/tex]where[tex]
\gamma = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1 - v^2 / c^2}}
[/tex]One you've worked out distances and times in one frame you can use the above equations to convert to another frame. For example, consider[tex]
\begin{align}
x_A &= 0.5 \, c t \\
x_B &= L + 0.49999 \, c t
\end{align}
[/tex]

Thanks for the reply. The gist of my question was whether I need to consider relativity when doing the radar trick if I want to get extremely accurate answers (assuming my radar is good for it, of course). I more or less understand how to move between frames, but it's not obvious whose frame to be in, radar or object. I need to think more about your answer too.
 
  • #6
If you use radar and do the calculations that DrGreg described, then you have used the definitions of Special Relativity and selected your rest frame as the frame in which the object is moving.
 
  • #7
ghwellsjr said:
If you use radar and do the calculations that DrGreg described, then you have used the definitions of Special Relativity and selected your rest frame as the frame in which the object is moving.

If I measure the time for a pulse to travel round trip and multiply by c/2, in what sense am I using special relativity? That seems like the plain vanilla way to me. Maybe I missed your point.
 
  • #8
As I said, you're using the definitions of Special Relativity.

EDIT: You were wondering what frame the measurement/calculation applied to. That's what I was answering.
 
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  • #9
SR is the same as Galilean when measuring the distances to objects from a single reference frame when constant speeds are involved. It is just d = v t. The same applies for the distances between objects. However, the speeds of objects are measured differently from different frames, found by applying the relativistic formula for speeds, but that is only necessary if transforming the measurements to a different frame of reference.
 
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  • #10
Here's what I got, for the two accelerating travelers problem (for one particular choice of the parameters):

http://img443.imageshack.us/img443/23/twotravelers.jpg [Broken]

The scenario involves two travelers, initially mutually stationary, and initially separated by 0.5 lightyears. Traveler 1 is initially located at the spatial origin, X = 0, of an inertial reference frame, and Traveler 2 is initially located at X = 0.5 ly in that same inertial frame. At the initial instant (T = 0), I've arbitrarily taken both of their ages to be zero years old. There is another person (the "Home-person") who is permanently located at the spatial origin, and who is also zero years old at the initial instant. So the given inertial frame represents the viewpoint of the Home-person.

At the instant T = 0, both travelers accelerate at one ly/y/y (which is just slightly less than one "g" ... 0.970g), and they both continue that acceleration throughout the scenario. The acceleration is in the direction of positive X, so Traveler 1 accelerates in the direction from Traveler 1 toward Traveler 2. And Traveler 2 accelerates in that same direction.

The plot is a Minkowsky diagram, showing the viewpoint of the Home-person. In the plot, the usual convention for Minkowski diagrams (with T plotted vertically, and X plotted horizontally) is not followed: I always prefer to plot X vertically and T horizontally.

The two curved lines in the plot are the worldlines of Traveler 1 (the lower curve) and of Traveler 2 (the upper curve). The plot shows the first two years of the Home-person's life, and it shows spatial locations out to 2 lightyears away from the origin. According to the Home-person, the separation between the two travelers is always 0.5 lightyears.

The tic-marks on the two curved lines show the ages of the two travelers. The diagram shows their lives up to (almost) 1.4 years old. According to the Home-person, the two travelers always have the same ages.

The two straight lines in the plot are the lines of simultaneity for Traveler 2, at two different choices of her age: at 0.5 years old and at 1.3 years old. These lines of simultaneity are determined using the CADO reference frame for Traveler 2. The CADO equation itself cannot be used, because the distant person of interest (Traveler 1) isn't unaccelerated. But the CADO reference frame can still be used, via either a graphical construction (as is done here), or via an iterative numerical process.

The points where these two straight lines intersect Traveler 1's worldline correspond to the age and position of Traveler 1, according to Traveler 2, when Traveler 2 is 0.5 years old and 1.3 years old, respectively.

From the diagram, we can read that, when Traveler 2 is 0.5 years old, Traveler 1 is about 0.23 years old, and is at a distance of about 0.58 ly from Traveler 2. Similarly, when Traveler 2 is about 1.3 years old, Traveler 1 is about 0.55 years old, and is at a distance of about 0.89 ly from Traveler 2.

So, for this particular scenario, Traveler 2 concludes that Traveler 1 starts out 0.5 ly away at the beginning, then is slightly farther away (0.58 ly) half a year later (in Traveler 2's time), and then is farther away still (0.89 ly) after 1.3 years. So Traveler 2 concludes that he is outrunning Traveler 1. I suspect that their separation approaches (but never exactly reaches) 1 ly, no matter how long the acceleration lasts.
 
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  • #11
Chuck37 said:
If I measure the time for a pulse to travel round trip and multiply by c/2, in what sense am I using special relativity? That seems like the plain vanilla way to me. Maybe I missed your point.

I"d say this is relativistic because you've assumed (in accordance with relativity) that the speed of light is constant and equal to 'c' without regard to picking any "special" observer - we know that the speed of light is always "c", for any observer.
 
  • #12
pervect said:
[...]
we know that the speed of light is always "c", for any observer.

That's true for any INERTIAL observer. It's not generally true for an accelerating observer.

Velocities according to an accelerating observer are discussed in this website:

https://sites.google.com/site/cadoequation/cado-reference-frame
 
  • #13
GrammawSally said:
Here's what I got, for the two accelerating travelers problem (for one particular choice of the parameters):
The OP did not ask about two accelerating travelers.

The OP did not even ask about one accelerating traveler.

The OP asked about himself (or another observer) being stationary with one or more INERTIALLY moving objects.
 
  • #14
ghwellsjr said:
The OP did not ask about two accelerating travelers.

You're right. Sorry ... I misread the original posting.
 
  • #15
I discovered that the "tic-marks" on the two lines-of-simultaneity in the previous image weren't correct. Here's a corrected image:

http://img525.imageshack.us/img525/9707/twotravelers3.jpg [Broken]

With the new (corrected) tic-marks on the two lines-of-simultaneity, it can be seen that when Traveler 2 is 0.5 years old, Traveler 1 is 0.24 years old, and is at a distance of 0.53 ly from Traveler 2.

When Traveler 2 is 1.3 years old, Traveler 1 is 0.53 years old, and is at a distance of 0.67 ly from Traveler 2.

I still suspect that their separation approaches 1 ly as Traveler 2 gets older and older, but I need to investigate that further before I can confirm it.

Sorry for those tic-mark mistakes.
 
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  • #16
Bringing this back up... if I'm moving very fast and using a radar to detect objects ahead, is there not a spatial dilation in my direction of travel that would cause me to get the wrong measurements? This is assuming my desire is to share information with someone not moving fast: "Object detected X meters ahead". Would I measure a distance √(1-(v/c)^2) short?
 
  • #17
Chuck37 said:
Bringing this back up... if I'm moving very fast and using a radar to detect objects ahead, is there not a spatial dilation in my direction of travel that would cause me to get the wrong measurements? This is assuming my desire is to share information with someone not moving fast: "Object detected X meters ahead". Would I measure a distance √(1-(v/c)^2) short?
First off, you are describing a spatial contraction, not a spatial dilation (dilation means getting bigger).

Secondly, you always have the problem when applying situations involving fast moving observers, that you just can't say "Object detected X meters ahead". What you can say is that in a particular frame of reference, you detected an object X meters ahead at some time in your past. If you have reason to believe that the object is inertial and you also used your radar to calculate its speed, then you can predict where it will be at any future time.

Thirdly, if your purpose is to communicate the location and trajectory of that object to someone else that is not at rest with respect to you, the two of you will have to have previously agreed on the reference frames you plan to use so that your information will be meaningful.

Fourthly, keep in mind that it will take time for your radio signal to reach that other person so the information he gets will be even further in the past than when you got it.

So the bottom line is that even though distances in your rest frame are contracted, you can still transform them into another rest frame in a meaningful way.
 
  • #18
ghwellsjr said:
First off, you are describing a spatial contraction, not a spatial dilation (dilation means getting bigger).

Secondly, you always have the problem when applying situations involving fast moving observers, that you just can't say "Object detected X meters ahead". What you can say is that in a particular frame of reference, you detected an object X meters ahead at some time in your past. If you have reason to believe that the object is inertial and you also used your radar to calculate its speed, then you can predict where it will be at any future time.

Thirdly, if your purpose is to communicate the location and trajectory of that object to someone else that is not at rest with respect to you, the two of you will have to have previously agreed on the reference frames you plan to use so that your information will be meaningful.

Fourthly, keep in mind that it will take time for your radio signal to reach that other person so the information he gets will be even further in the past than when you got it.

So the bottom line is that even though distances in your rest frame are contracted, you can still transform them into another rest frame in a meaningful way.

I think you answered, but let me be more specific. There is a radar corner reflector on the ground at a known latitude and I'm in a supersonic jet flying towards it from the east. I know where I am using a GPS and I want to tell someone on the ground where the reflector is - I just need to find longitude. When I make my light time measurement, should I account for spatial contraction in determining where the object is in terms of Earth coordinates?
 
  • #19
No supersonic jet can go anywhere near fast enough for length contraction to be a factor. The corner reflector will be bigger than the error you get from ignoring relativistic effects.
 
  • #20
It was just an example. I think if you were measuring from a satellite you could get a few millimeters.
 
  • #21
Yes, but how big is your corner reflector?
 
  • #22
ghwellsjr said:
Yes, but how big is your corner reflector?

Which size are you asking about? Its physical extent? Or the variability in the length of
the light path that is reflected? The latter is arguably the appropriate figure of merit.
 
  • #23
jbriggs444 said:
Which size are you asking about? Its physical extent? Or the variability in the length of the light path that is reflected? The latter is arguably the appropriate figure of merit.
Both. The difference in calculating the length of the light path using relativity or not using relativity is only a few millimeters. The physical extent of a corner reflector is going to be bigger than that. If the guy in the supersonic jet (or satellite) reports a longitude that is off by a few millimeters, the guy on the ground will have no trouble finding the corner reflector.
 
  • #24
jbriggs444 said:
Which size are you asking about? Its physical extent? Or the variability in the length of
the light path that is reflected? The latter is arguably the appropriate figure of merit.

I'm trying to understand the physics, so ignore the practicality of this. I want to know if I'm going really fast (relative to the frame I want to measure in) if I'll get the wrong answer using light time to measure distance.
 
  • #25
Chuck37 said:
I'm trying to understand the physics, so ignore the practicality of this. I want to know if I'm going really fast (relative to the frame I want to measure in) if I'll get the wrong answer using light time to measure distance.
Yes, if you apply the calculation that DrGreg supplied earlier as it will be correct for your rest frame. But as I answered in post #17, you can transform the answer into any other frame so that it will be correct in that frame.

EDIT: This by the way is what GPS has to do all the time so that distances and times that our receivers display on the ground will be correct.
 
  • #26
ghwellsjr said:
EDIT: This by the way is what GPS has to do all the time so that distances and times that our receivers display on the ground will be correct.

I'm not familiar with any relativistic stuff required on the receiver end besides Sagnac, at least for normal receivers. Jets and satellites might require something extra. What are you referring to?
 
  • #27
Chuck37 said:
I'm not familiar with any relativistic stuff required on the receiver end besides Sagnac, at least for normal receivers. Jets and satellites might require something extra. What are you referring to?
I didn't say GPS receivers have to do relatvisitic stuff, it's done in the satellites. In your example of the satellite communicating to the guy on the ground, one or the other of them has to do a transformation of the data. It doesn't matter which one. As I said in post #17, you, in the jet or satellite, and the guy on the ground have to have prior agreement on which frames to use to communicate meaningful information and then I said you, in the jet or satellite, could transform the distances into another rest frame (in this case, the ground rest frame) in a meaningful way. That is what GPS satellites do. Their clocks actually run at a different rate than ground clocks do and they make an adjustment to compensate.

By the way, we have only been discussing Special Relativity but in actuallity, clocks at different elevations on the Earth run at different rates due to the effects of General Relativity and so we use what is called Coordinated Time to take this into account and that is what GPS compensates for. If you actually had an atomic clock on the Earth and you received a GPS signal that also provided time information, they wouldn't necessarily match.
 

What is the distance between two fast moving objects?

The distance between two fast moving objects is the measure of the space between them. This distance can be calculated by using the formula: Distance = Speed x Time. It is important to note that the distance between two fast moving objects can change depending on their speed and the time at which the measurement is taken.

How is the distance between fast moving objects measured?

The distance between fast moving objects can be measured using various methods such as radar, laser rangefinders, and triangulation. These methods use the principles of physics and mathematics to calculate the distance between two objects based on their speed and the time it takes for them to travel.

Can the distance between fast moving objects change?

Yes, the distance between fast moving objects can change due to various factors such as changes in their speed, direction, or acceleration. Additionally, external forces such as wind or gravity can also affect the distance between two fast moving objects.

What happens to the distance between fast moving objects if their speeds are different?

If the speeds of two fast moving objects are different, the distance between them will change over time. This is because the faster object will cover more distance in the same amount of time compared to the slower object. The distance between them will continue to increase or decrease depending on their relative speeds.

How does the distance between fast moving objects affect their interaction?

The distance between fast moving objects can affect their interaction in various ways. If the distance is too close, they may collide or experience strong gravitational forces. On the other hand, if the distance is too far, they may not have any noticeable interaction. The distance between two fast moving objects plays a crucial role in determining their behavior and potential impact on each other.

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