mgkii
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- TL;DR
- Laser pointer shot across a spaceship in deep space hits the wall directly across from it. When the spaceship accelerates the beam curves and hits lower down. However, an outside observer will (according to the video source) observe no change in light path.
This Veritasium video https : / / youtu.be / XRr1kaXKBsU?si=zNqHwmCTq-cmcsbW (spaces added in case there's an issue with posting URLs) at 13:04 makes a statement which I can't get my head around. Veritasium videos always seem to be well researched so my working assumption is it's my lack of brain power rather than their mistake! However, I can't see a direct reference to this one on the forum.
The video describes a spaceship in deep space under no acceleration. A laser pointer it set up to point across the ship (side to side as opposed to nose to engine) and as expected, the pointer highlights a spot directly across from the source. The spaceship then fires up an goes into constant acceleration and the laser point moves down the wall slightly in the same way it would if the acceleration were due to gravity. So far so good.
The video then goes on to say that an outside observer in an inertial FOR would see no bend in the light path. My understanding breaks here, because they couldn't see the light hitting a different part of the wall, so how would they see something different? I would have reasoned that an outside observer would see exactly the same effect as the accelerating observer; the movement of the light beam is perpendicular to the direction of acceleration.
Am I missing something or was it an error in (as far as I can tell) an otherwise excellent video?
Many thanks in advance
Matt
The video describes a spaceship in deep space under no acceleration. A laser pointer it set up to point across the ship (side to side as opposed to nose to engine) and as expected, the pointer highlights a spot directly across from the source. The spaceship then fires up an goes into constant acceleration and the laser point moves down the wall slightly in the same way it would if the acceleration were due to gravity. So far so good.
The video then goes on to say that an outside observer in an inertial FOR would see no bend in the light path. My understanding breaks here, because they couldn't see the light hitting a different part of the wall, so how would they see something different? I would have reasoned that an outside observer would see exactly the same effect as the accelerating observer; the movement of the light beam is perpendicular to the direction of acceleration.
Am I missing something or was it an error in (as far as I can tell) an otherwise excellent video?
Many thanks in advance
Matt
