Maintaining Acceleration at Near Speed of Light: The Role of Relativity

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of maintaining acceleration as a spacecraft approaches the speed of light, particularly focusing on the implications of relativity, time dilation, and the perspectives of both the spacecraft and planetary observers. Participants explore how thrust and acceleration are perceived differently from various frames of reference.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that as a spacecraft approaches the speed of light, its engines appear to produce less thrust from an external perspective, raising questions about how it can continue to accelerate.
  • Others argue that while the spacecraft may seem to slow down due to time dilation, it continues to accelerate in its own frame of reference, which is a point of confusion for some participants.
  • A participant compares the situation to a car needing to increase engine speed to maintain velocity, noting that in space, engines can keep accelerating without needing to increase their power due to the lack of friction.
  • Some participants discuss the implications of a hypothetical ramjet design and how the explosions used for propulsion might appear to slow down from a planetary perspective while still providing thrust from the spacecraft's viewpoint.
  • There is a suggestion that any force or thrust, no matter how small, will result in acceleration, challenging the notion that a threshold of thrust is necessary to maintain acceleration.
  • Participants express confusion over the relevance of what is observed from the planetary perspective versus the actual experiences of those on the spacecraft.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants exhibit a mix of agreement and disagreement, particularly regarding the interpretation of acceleration and thrust from different frames of reference. There is no consensus on how to reconcile the differing observations of the spacecraft and planetary observers.

Contextual Notes

Some limitations include the dependence on definitions of thrust and acceleration, as well as unresolved questions about the effects of time dilation on perceived thrust and acceleration. The discussion does not resolve these complexities.

sacr3
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If I were to watch a ship reach the speed of light from earth, I would eventually see the ships engine slowing down as well as the crew and the ship itself, but with the ships engine slowing down from my perspective how would the ship continue to accelerate to near the speed of light? Since the engines are slowing down from my perspective?

If you need me to clarify more, i'll try.

Thank you.
 
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Exactly. They still produce less and less thrust (and the spaceship appears to have more and more mass), but this is one of the reasons nothing can accelerate to the speed of light. Your hypothetical spaceship would approach c, but never actually reach c (from the Earth's FoR, of course.)
 
For example, a car that goes up to 100mph will need to increase its engines speed faster and faster to reach 100mph, Same with the ship that wants to reach 88% the speed of light

But from the planetary perspective, the ship will reach something like 50% speed of light and the the ship would begin to "slow down" due to time dilation, thus the engines would slow down as well, but yet it will continue to accelerate?

Thats like slowing down your car engine, but yet the car continues to accelerate forward
 
sacr3 said:
For example, a car that goes up to 100mph will need to increase its engines speed faster and faster to reach 100mph, Same with the ship that wants to reach 88% the speed of light

But from the planetary perspective, the ship will reach something like 50% speed of light and the the ship would begin to "slow down" due to time dilation, thus the engines would slow down as well, but yet it will continue to accelerate?

Thats like slowing down your car engine, but yet the car continues to accelerate forward

Not exactly. Due to friction, car engines apply enough force to maintain the car at the given speed. Due to the lack of friction in space, engines will pretty much keep something accelerating without needing to increase their strength. Also, from the ship's point of view, they're at rest for this whole experiment, while accelerating. Very confusing.

But from the planetary perspective, the ship will reach something like 50% speed of light and the the ship would begin to "slow down" due to time dilation, thus the engines would slow down as well, but yet it will continue to accelerate?

Yes, but the engines won't appear as powerful.

Thats like slowing down your car engine, but yet the car continues to accelerate forward

As I pointed out before, car engines apply enough force to maintain a car at a given velocity, canceling out the friction, basically, while spaceship engines just accelerate the spaceship. To go faster, the engines just need to be going, you don't need to turn them up.
 
sacr3 said:
For example, a car that goes up to 100mph will need to increase its engines speed faster and faster to reach 100mph, Same with the ship that wants to reach 88% the speed of light

But from the planetary perspective, the ship will reach something like 50% speed of light and the the ship would begin to "slow down" due to time dilation, thus the engines would slow down as well, but yet it will continue to accelerate?

Thats like slowing down your car engine, but yet the car continues to accelerate forward

You are confusing what YOU see with what is actually happening. What is seen from the planetary perspective, as you put it, is irrelevant to the ship itself, which just keeps on accelerating asymptotically towards c.
 
Good question, time dilated acceleration. Is one g observed, actually 1g for the traveler?

I'd guess it is.

Is acceleration invariant?
 
So since from the planetary point of view (assuming its a "Ramjet/scoopjet design, using Hydrogen fusion to propel the ship forward, bursts of explosions) the explosions will slow down the closer it gets to the speed of light, meaning the force of the explosion won't push the jet anymore because its expanding at an insanely slow rate, thus the spacecraft will receive no more "thrust" no? Yet the spacecraft will still continue to accelerate

But yet from the spacecraft s point of view, the explosions will still be detonating and propelling the spacecraft forward, no?
 
sacr3 said:
So since from the planetary point of view (assuming its a "Ramjet/scoopjet design, using Hydrogen fusion to propel the ship forward, bursts of explosions) the explosions will slow down the closer it gets to the speed of light, meaning the force of the explosion won't push the jet anymore because its expanding at an insanely slow rate, thus the spacecraft will receive no more "thrust" no? Yet the spacecraft will still continue to accelerate

But yet from the spacecraft s point of view, the explosions will still be detonating and propelling the spacecraft forward, no?

Basically.
 
Then how does the spacecraft propel forward if the explosions do not provide anymore thrust? Because from the spacecraft view he will be accelerating, but from our view he can't accelerate because the explosions have slowed down due to the time dilation
 
  • #10
sacr3 said:
Then how does the spacecraft propel forward if the explosions do not provide anymore thrust? Because from the spacecraft view he will be accelerating, but from our view he can't accelerate because the explosions have slowed down due to the time dilation

You insist on basing what happens on the ship on what we see. You really need to get over that. What we see is IRRELEVANT to what happens on the ship.
 
  • #11
phinds said:
You insist on basing what happens on the ship on what we see. You really need to get over that. What we see is IRRELEVANT to what happens on the ship.

Could you elaborate?
 
  • #12
sacr3 said:
Could you elaborate?

Take a look at this:

www.phinds.com/time dilation

The people on the ship see, in their reference frame, a passage of time that is exactly what the planet-bound people see in THEIR reference frame. It is the RELATIVE view of what each sees of the other that you are confusing with what they each actually experience.
 
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  • #13
sacr3 said:
Could you elaborate?

Hi You seem to have an idea that there is a threshold for necessary thrust to maintain acceleration. In reality any force/thrust will result in acceleration no matter how small.
So you are correct that Earth frame observers will see a diminishing thrust (as for instance the trail of ejected mass) and a decreasing coordinate acceleration but the observed thrust and the coordinate acceleration will never reach zero just as the velocity will never reach c.

Edit: there is a certain negligible threshold due to loss from heat conversion and other factors but that is not rally important regarding your basic question here.
 
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