Length Contraction & Molecular Structure Effects

In summary, the molecular structure of an object does not change when it moves close to the speed of light. However, the shape of the object may distort due to the change in electromagnetic interactions caused by its motion. The mass of the object increases due to its kinetic energy, but the number of atoms remains the same. In a frame of reference moving along with the object, there would be no changes to the object itself, but the world around it would experience the same effects.
  • #1
Quan Chi
7
0
Hello,

Just one quick question. What happens to the molecular structure of an object if it moves close to the speed of light? Does the high speed affect the atoms, protons, neutrons, electrons, molecular structures? Does the density/thickness of the object increase? Or do the protons and electrons contract as well?

Also, if the mass increases because of the high speed, how does it affect the molecular structure? How can it have bigger mass then? Does it have more atoms and molecules then?

Regards.
 
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  • #2
Quan Chi said:
Also, if the mass increases because of the high speed, how does it affect the molecular structure? How can it have bigger mass then? Does it have more atoms and molecules then?
Regards.

You've missed the point of what relativity is telling you. E = mc² says that the mass of an object is a measure of how much energy (both mass-energy AND kinetic energy) it contains.

It is sufficient to increasing the kinetic energy of the molecules composing an object to see its mass increase.
 
  • #3
Quan Chi said:
What happens to the molecular structure of an object if it moves close to the speed of light?
Nothing. Consider the object to be at rest and the observer moving.
 
  • #4
Length contraction is a consequence of describing the coordinates of a body in a frame of reference in which it is moving close to light speed. It says nothing about the body itself, except the fact that it is moving very, very fast in that frame. Such a frame can be chosen such that you are moving close to lightspeed, without having to accelerate you to such speeds. In that frame, you will seem to undergo length contraction in the direction you are moving.
 
  • #5
Consider a frame where you are at rest with your lab equipment and you have accelerated a molecule to some velocity.

More atoms? No, the number of charges is fixed, accelerating the molecule won't change the number of atoms.

More mass? No, mass in the modern terminology means rest mass (or more generally, center of mass energy).

More energy? Yes, the molecule speeds up and so it has more kinetic energy.

Does the shape distort? Yes. The molecule is bound by electromagnetic interactions and these interactions change when you set a molecule in motion (the response of the atoms also changes). All this is captured elegantly in Einstein's length contraction formula (provided you use it correctly). See for instance Bell's discussion in "How to Teach Special Relativtiy" in his book Speakable and Unspeakable in Quantum Mechanics.

In a frame moving along with the molecule, nothing happens to the molecule, but the world around suffers the same effects I mentioned above.
 
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  • #6
Thanks for the answers. This has helped.
 

1. What is length contraction and how does it affect molecular structure?

Length contraction is a phenomenon in Einstein's theory of relativity where objects in motion appear to become shorter in the direction of their motion. This can affect the molecular structure of objects by causing their atoms to become closer together, resulting in changes in their physical properties.

2. How is length contraction related to the speed of light?

According to Einstein's theory of relativity, the speed of light is constant and the same for all observers. This means that as an object approaches the speed of light, its length in the direction of motion will appear to contract due to time dilation.

3. Can length contraction be observed in everyday life?

No, length contraction is only noticeable at extremely high speeds close to the speed of light. In everyday life, objects are not moving at these speeds, so length contraction is not observable.

4. How does length contraction affect the molecular bonds in a material?

Length contraction can cause the distance between atoms in a material to decrease, leading to changes in the strength and stability of molecular bonds. This can result in changes in the physical properties of the material, such as its density and melting point.

5. Is there a limit to how much length can contract due to high speeds?

According to the theory of relativity, there is no limit to how much length can contract as an object approaches the speed of light. However, the amount of contraction becomes increasingly negligible at lower speeds, making it difficult to observe in everyday situations.

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