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Why c2 (speed of light squared)? |
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| Jan8-13, 02:03 AM | #52 |
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Why c2 (speed of light squared)? |
| Jan8-13, 06:04 AM | #53 |
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Initial momentum or the momentum with which the light hits the cylinder will be equal to TOTAL ENERGY OF THE LIGHT / SPEED OF LIGHT (E/c).
Final momentum or the momentum with which the cylinder moves after colliding with light is just THE MASS OF THE CYLINDER * VELOCITY WITH WHICH IT MOVES (Mv) According to Momentum conservation principle Initial momentum will be equal to Final momentum .So E/c = Mv (OR) v=E/Mc |
| Jan8-13, 09:42 AM | #54 |
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That's a nice point. You are missing a factor of gamma on the right side though - so it doesn't quite work. As a novice's derivation it works well though.
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| Jan8-13, 07:09 PM | #55 |
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| Jan8-13, 07:20 PM | #56 |
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In relativistic physics momentum isn't defined as ##p=mv## but rather as ##p= \gamma m v## where ##\gamma \equiv \frac{1}{\sqrt{1 - v^2/c^2}}##. So your derivation doesn't quite work. It's been a while since I've had to derive E=mc^2 (I had to do it for an extra credit problem on a test) so I'm not sure whether or not the derivation on that site can be simply expanded to be correct or not, but in it's presented form it does not work.
As I said though I approve of it as a teaching method - it's quite simple - as long as readers are aware that a more thorough proof is required. |
| Jan8-13, 07:39 PM | #57 |
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| Jan8-13, 08:08 PM | #58 |
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Landau's derivation of the equations of relativistic mechanics in his book Classical Field Theory might help you better understand relativity.
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| Jan8-13, 08:11 PM | #59 |
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| Jan8-13, 08:35 PM | #60 |
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| Jan8-13, 08:42 PM | #61 |
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| Jan8-13, 11:54 PM | #62 |
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| Jan9-13, 01:48 AM | #63 |
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| Jan9-13, 02:20 AM | #64 |
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The Lagrangian [itex]L = -mc^{2}\sqrt{1 - \frac{v^{2}}{c^{2}}}[/itex], [itex]p = \frac{\partial L}{\partial v} = \frac{mv}{\sqrt{1 - \frac{v^{2}}{c^{2}}}}[/itex], [itex]E = p\cdot v - L = \frac{mv^{2}}{{\sqrt{1 - \frac{v^{2}}{c^{2}}}}} + mc^{2}\sqrt{1 - \frac{v^{2}}{c^{2}}} = \frac{mc^{2}}{{\sqrt{1 - \frac{v^{2}}{c^{2}}}}}[/itex] so in the rest frame we have that [itex]E = mc^{2}[/itex]. The speed of light squared quantity is just a unit conversion. If you work in natural units then you won't even see it explicitly.
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| Jan9-13, 02:36 AM | #65 |
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And I dont know what is "ρ" in the equation . Could you explain? |
| Jan9-13, 03:44 PM | #66 |
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P is momentum: which is standard notation.
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| Jan10-13, 10:02 AM | #67 |
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