keepitmoving
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if an object moving at .99 c emits a light, does that light move away from the emitter at 1.00 c ?
The discussion centers on the behavior of light emitted from an object moving at relativistic speeds, specifically whether the light moves away from the emitter at the speed of 1.00 c. Participants explore concepts from special relativity, including the invariance of the speed of light and the relativistic addition of velocities.
Participants express differing views on the behavior of light in relation to the emitter's speed, with no consensus reached. While some support the idea that light's speed remains constant at c, others propose alternative interpretations that suggest a different understanding of velocity addition.
Discussions include various interpretations of the relativistic addition of velocities and the implications of different notations used. Some participants correct their own misunderstandings, indicating a dynamic exchange of ideas and clarifications.
This discussion may be of interest to those studying special relativity, physics students exploring the nature of light and motion, and anyone curious about the implications of relativistic physics on everyday concepts of speed and motion.
No it won't. A stationary observer would still measure the speed of light as c. The invariance of the speed of light is a fundamental concept in special relativity.keepitmoving said:if the emitter suddenly stops, does the light know it? If the light doesn`t know it, the light will be moving at c plus the previous speed of the emitter.
In a way it will, but with a different definition of "plus". In SR you have to add up velocities like this:keepitmoving said:the light will be moving at c plus the previous speed of the emitter.
pesto said:Fredrik, what equation is that? Does it have a name I can google? :)
pesto said:Does the u \oplus v means the velocity of the emitter relative to the observer plus the velocity of the photon relative to the emitter? If I could try your patience for one more stupid question, what's a plus sign with a circle around it? Just a sign for adding vectors or what?
Thanks again.
malawi_glenn said:v is the velocity relative the observer for objectA and u is the velocity relative the observer for objectB, always. And <br /> u \oplus v<br /> means the relative velocity of A and B as measured by the observer. <br /> \oplus <br /> means "composition law for velocities under boosts"
In the wiki article this <br /> u \oplus v<br /> is just called "s".
<br /> <br /> here is really good explanation what is included <a href="http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/SR/velocity.html" target="_blank" class="link link--external" rel="nofollow ugc noopener">http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/SR/velocity.html</a><br /> <br /> forget about my last post, I was not focused on this thread, Sorry for that.<br /> <br /> I have changed it now so it should be correct now, I had many irons in the oven :-) (and maybe I was confused by the non-standard notation \oplus ) ;-)<br /> <br /> The point of the calculation given by Fredrik is that light always move with speed c for all observers.pesto said:Woah! Back to the old drawing board. Thank you for the explanation. I though u \oplus v[/text] or "s" was the velocity of objectB relative to the observer!
Sorry, that's confused.malawi_glenn said:v is the velocity relative the observer for objectA and u is the velocity relative the observer for objectB, always. And <br /> u \oplus v<br /> means the relative velocity of A and B as measured by the observer. <br /> \oplus <br /> means "composition law for velocities under boosts"
In the wiki article this <br /> u \oplus v<br /> is just called "s".
DrGreg said:Sorry, that's confused.
If A, B and C are 3 objects all moving along the same straight lineThe symbol \oplus is not standard notation. Some may use it but others don't. It's just a way of denoting a different way of "adding" velocities. I'd prefer to call it "composition" rather than "addition".
- u is the velocity of B measured by A
- v is the velocity of C measured by B
- u \oplus v is the velocity of C measured by A
Sorry, my intentions weren't clear. That comment was really aimed at Pesto in answer to post #11.malawi_glenn said:yup I know, it was an error, I fixed it.
regarding "composition" vs. "addition" I actually mentioned that <br /> \oplus<br /> stands for "composition" right? why adding that?
Cheers
DrGreg said:Sorry, my intentions weren't clear. That comment was really aimed at Pesto in answer to post #11.
In case anyone reading this thread is confused, I was correcting an error in post #12, but then malawi_glenn corrected his own error at the same time, making my comment out of date by the time I posted it. But it's too late to undo that now without causing even further confusion...![]()