Tokage said:
I'm a bit confused. Relativity states that we should observe a shortening of say a spaceship when it moves close to (c) correct? But isn't one of the reasons we can't accelerate mass to (c) because rather than reaching any higher speeds when getting close to (c) it would just increase in mass?...
The maximum accumulated speed difference you can obtain is simply the maximum speed of your thrusting medium, whether it is air, water, explosions, etc., relative to the center of momentum frame of the combined fuel, vehicle, and payload masses. In particle accelerators, your thrusting medium is the electromagnetic field of the accelerator, which propagates at the speed of light.
Tokage said:
I may have gotten completely wrong information, but if this is the case how can this shortening effect work with the idea that the mass would increase? Someone straighten me out please, thanks!
It depends on how you do the accounting.
Let's say I have propellant and a rocket.
The mass of the propellant is A, and the mass of the rocket is B. (To simplify matters, include payload mass as a part of B.)
Some of the energy of propellent A, which is all but a tiny fraction of its mass, is transferred to rocket B. Let's call that difference a "mass transferred", k. The detritus (A-k) is jettisoned out the rocket nozzle.
The mass transferred, k, times the speed of light squared, equals the kinetic energy of the rocket fuel going the other end, which has a much higher mass and much smaller velocity.
The combined energy of the propellent and rocket (A+B) has not changed here (i.e. (A+B)=(A-k)+(B+k)), however the mass of the rocket has gained some tiny amount of mass, while the propellant, which is the energy source, loses a tiny bit of it.
Now, if one were to accelerate the propellent and rocket (A+B) with a laser, then you would be increasing the mass of the propellent and rocket (A+B) at the expense of the energy source of the laser.
Eventually, the propellent and rocket (A+B) lose energy via heat. However, this is not in anyway direct evidence of acceleration, and nor it is required of acceleration. So any relationship between acceleration and mass loss is, to simply put, weak.
In the end, whether mass increases or decreases has little to do with acceleration. It has to do with what amount of energy is emitted or absorbed by an object. With the word "absorb" I don't mean to say that object itself gains energy, for after all, some objects, such as electrons, are identified as having an invariable mass. Rather, it is possible that energy fields, superimposing electrons and other particles, can themselves contribute to the mass
at those electrons and other particles.