Find the Speed of an Electron in the lab frame

AI Thread Summary
An electron is moving at 0.90c in the lab frame, while a proton moves at 0.77c relative to the electron. The discussion focuses on using Lorentz transformations to find the proton's speed in the lab frame. One participant initially calculated the proton's speed as 0.42c but struggled with the coordinate transformations. Ultimately, they resolved their confusion by correctly applying the transformations and accounting for the proton's negative position relative to the electron. The conversation highlights the importance of careful application of relativistic equations in determining velocities.
B3NR4Y
Gold Member
Messages
170
Reaction score
8

Homework Statement


An electron moves to the right with a speed of 0.90c in the laboratory frame. A proton moves to the left with a speed of 0.77c relative to the electron.

Using the Lorentz coordinate transformations, find the speed of the proton in the laboratory frame

Homework Equations


$$
\begin{align*}
x &= \frac{x'+ut'}{\sqrt(1-(u^2/c^2))} \\
y & = y \\
z & = z \\
t & = \frac{t'+(\frac{u}{c^2})x'}{\sqrt(1-(u^2/c^2))} \\

\end{align*}
$$

The Attempt at a Solution


I used the velocity transformation in the second part of the problem and found the speed of the proton to be 0.42c, but I'm not sure how to find it with the coordinate transforms.

I tried dividing x and t, but terms that I don't know remain and I can't get rid of them.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Are you allowed to derive the velocity transform from the coordinate transform and then use the velocity transform? That's how I would want to do it...
 
Geofleur said:
Are you allowed to derive the velocity transform from the coordinate transform and then use the velocity transform? That's how I would want to do it...
Haha, I don't think so cause that's exactly what I thought to do, the next part specifically says to use the velocity transformations to find the velocity and that they should be equal to the velocity I found in part A.
 
You know, I think you do some of the same steps as if you were deriving the velocity transform, but don't take the limit as ## \Delta t ## goes to zero. Then you can calculate ## \Delta x ## for the proton relative to the lab frame and ## \Delta x' ## for the proton relative to the electron, etc. Know what I mean?
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes B3NR4Y
It might also help to arrange things so that the proton and the electron are both at the origin of the lab frame at t = t' = 0. Then instead of ## \Delta x ## and ## \Delta t ## you can just deal with ## x ## and ## t ##, for example.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes B3NR4Y
I think I see what you mean, I will try that.
 
Hm, it's not quite working or I'm doing something wrong. Not sure I see why I shouldn't divide by Δt, otherwise I don't get a velocity.

## \delta x = \frac{x_{f}' + ut_{f}'}{\sqrt{1-\frac{u^2}{c^2}}} ## I tried this with some dummy numbers, like tf = 1s later, thus xf = -0.77 c.
 
Nevermind, it worked. I forgot to make xf negative. Thanks a LOT!
 
Yeah, you do need to divide by time to get a velocity, just not to take limits and all that (I edited my advice above a little!).
 
  • Like
Likes B3NR4Y

Similar threads

Back
Top