Calculate its longest and shortest diameters when its moving

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The discussion focuses on calculating the longest and shortest diameters of a nucleus with a rest diameter of 4 X 10^-14 m when moving at a speed of 0.99c. Using the Lorentz contraction formula, L = L0 * √(1 - v^2/c^2), both the longest and shortest diameters are calculated to be 5.64 X 10^-15 m. This outcome illustrates that at high speeds, relativistic effects cause the diameter to contract equally in all directions, resulting in identical measurements for both diameters.

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shezill
i need help on this previous year exam question

consider a nucleus with a diameter 4 X 10^-14m. calculate its longest and shortest diameters when its moving at speed v = 0.99c.

thank you for any help
 
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It's a really simple problem, you just need the length contraction equation and then plug and chug.

d = d'(1-(v/c)^2)^1/2

Remember, this only affects the diameter in the direction of motion.
 


To calculate the longest and shortest diameters of the moving nucleus, we can use the Lorentz contraction formula:

L = L0 * √(1 - v^2/c^2)

Where L0 is the rest length of the nucleus (4 X 10^-14m), v is the speed (0.99c), and c is the speed of light (3 X 10^8 m/s).

Plugging in the values, we get:

Llongest = 4 X 10^-14 * √(1 - (0.99c)^2/(3 X 10^8 m/s)^2)
= 4 X 10^-14 * √(1 - 0.9801)
= 4 X 10^-14 * √0.0199
= 4 X 10^-14 * 0.141
= 5.64 X 10^-15 m

Therefore, the longest diameter of the moving nucleus is 5.64 X 10^-15 m.

Similarly, for the shortest diameter, we can use the same formula and plug in the values:

Lshortest = 4 X 10^-14 * √(1 - (0.99c)^2/(3 X 10^8 m/s)^2)
= 4 X 10^-14 * √(1 - 0.9801)
= 4 X 10^-14 * √0.0199
= 4 X 10^-14 * 0.141
= 5.64 X 10^-15 m

Therefore, the shortest diameter of the moving nucleus is also 5.64 X 10^-15 m.

It is interesting to note that the longest and shortest diameters are the same when the nucleus is moving at such a high speed. This is due to the relativistic effects of time dilation and length contraction, which make the length of an object appear shorter in the direction of motion. So, no matter what direction the nucleus is moving, its diameter will always appear to be the same length.
 

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