Lorentz Contraction with small velocity

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating Lorentz contraction for a car traveling at 30 m/s, with a rest length of 5.0 m. Participants highlight the challenge of computing the contraction due to the low velocity, which results in a value close to 1 when using the standard formula. They discuss the need for a binomial expansion to approximate the contraction effectively, leading to a simplified formula. The conversation emphasizes the importance of recalling binomial approximations from prior lessons to solve the problem accurately. Overall, the thread provides insights into applying theoretical concepts to practical calculations in special relativity.
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Homework Statement


About how many femtometers shorter than its rest length is the length of a car measured in the ground frame if the car is traveling at 30 m/s in that frame? Assume for the sake of argument that the car's rest length is 5.0 m. Remember that 1 fm = 10^-15 m.


Homework Equations


L=Lr*\sqrt{1-\beta^{2}}


The Attempt at a Solution



This is a pretty straight forward Lorentz contraction problem, but all attempts to actually calculate it fail because the velocity is so slow (1*10-7). How can I scale the numbers so solving 1-\beta^{2} doesn't just give me 1?

Thanks for the help.
 
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It takes quite a bit of space (plus a masterful use of latex) to take you through the derivation of the "low velocity" formula. But it ends up as √(1-ß^2) ≈ 1-(0.5)ß^2.

The derivation involves going through a binomial expansion of the original formula. Do you recall doing this in class?
 
Thanks for the reply. We talked about the binomial approximation when we were learning about about the relationship between spacetime and proper time, but I didn't think to apply it in this case.
Thanks for the help.
 
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