What is the Doppler shift equation for light?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the period of a pulsating star as observed by a moving observer. The original poster attempted to use the Doppler shift equation for light but realized their approach was incorrect. Instead, the focus should be on time dilation, which relates the time between events for different observers. The correct formula involves the Lorentz factor (gamma), leading to a calculated period of approximately 4.41 seconds for the observer. Understanding the distinction between Doppler shift and time dilation is crucial for solving such problems.
criznet
i've been having a tough time trying to solve the following problem.

A pulsating star has a period of 3 sec as seen from the rest mass frame of the star. What is the period of the star as measured by an observer traveling 2.2e8 m/s with respect to the star?

I assumed that it was simply the doppler shift for light and I found the equation.

f` = f sqrt(1+v^2/c^2) / sqrt(1 - v^2/c^2).

So in changed the given period of 3 sec to frequency by inverting it. plugged in 2.2e8 for v and 3.0e8 for c. I came up with the observed frequency and inverted it for my answer, but it seems that i am incorrect. anyone have insight into this?

dave
 
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IIRC Relativistic Doppler Shift is:
sqrt((1+v/c)/(1-v/c)) = λ'/λ

Hoever, you're looking for time dilation instead, it's the frequency of the pulsar, not the light, that you're interested in.
 
Both you and Nate have the right equation for the relativistic Doppler equation. Here's a page on the relativistic Doppler equation for reference:

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/relativ/reldop2.html

What you want is time dilation. When two events occur at the same location in space but at different times, you can very simply relate the time between those events observed by two observers like this:

t2 = gamma t1

I get 4.41 seconds.

Be careful when taking this approach: when the two events take place at different space and time coordinates, the expression is more complicated.

- Warren
 
For anyone reading this thread who is unfamiliar with gamma:

gamma = 1 / sqrt(1 - (v/c)^2)

- Warren
 

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