Measuring Tape, Speed of Light & Time Dilation

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Discussion Overview

The discussion explores the implications of time dilation on a measuring tape unspooling from a vehicle traveling close to the speed of light. Participants examine the effects of relativistic speeds on the perception of time and motion, particularly focusing on the mechanics of the spool and the relationship between different reference frames. The conversation includes theoretical considerations and speculative scenarios.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant proposes that an observer on the vehicle would see the spool unraveling faster than the speed of light due to time dilation effects.
  • Another participant counters that the spool would rotate at less than the speed of light, emphasizing that time dilation affects the passage of time rather than velocity.
  • Some participants discuss the implications of the speed of the fastest forward-moving edge of the spool, suggesting that it could limit the vehicle's speed relative to Earth.
  • There is a debate about whether a clock synchronized with a rotating object remains synchronized in different frames, with some arguing that it does and others questioning the implications of time dilation on synchronization.
  • One participant mentions that the relativistic velocity addition formula must be considered, noting that velocities do not add linearly in relativity.
  • Another participant highlights that the velocity of the rim of the spool varies at different positions, which is true even in classical mechanics.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the effects of time dilation and the mechanics of the spool's motion. There is no consensus on whether the vehicle's speed is limited to less than half the speed of light or if it can approach the speed of light under certain conditions. The discussion remains unresolved with multiple competing views.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference specific scenarios and assumptions about the mechanics of the spool and the effects of relativistic speeds, but these assumptions are not universally accepted. The discussion includes unresolved mathematical steps regarding the velocities involved.

Xavier Cross
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Had a thought the other day. If a spool of a measuring tape was on a vehicle traveling close to the speed of light away from the Earth, with the spool anchored to the Earth, due to time dilation, would an observer on the vehicle see the spool unraveling faster than the speed of light?
 
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No, the spool would either rotate at less than the speed of light, or it would break. Note that time dilation affects the passage of time on the moving spool, not its velocity.
 
So the vehicle could only move at less than half the speed of light relative to the Earth, due to the speed of the fastest forward moving edge of the spool, and an observer on the vehicle would see it as unspooling at close to the speed of light. Ironic that if a second vehicle with the same initial mass left the Earth at the same time, it would outpace the one with the unspooling tape, even though the slower one has less weight.
 
Drakkith said:
Note that time dilation affects the passage of time on the moving spool, not its velocity.
A cyclic process, like the rotation of the spool, will surely be subject to time dilation.
 
Last edited:
Xavier Cross said:
would an observer on the vehicle see the spool unraveling faster than the speed of light?
No, kinetic time dilation is symmetrical. So in the frame of the vehicle a full "revolution" of a spool on Earth takes longer than in the frame of the earth.

I put revolution in scare quotes, because what actually happens in the vehicle frame is not a normal rotation, but what is described here:
http://www.spacetimetravel.org/tompkins/node7.html

And when you add the optical effects, due to signal travel time it gets ever weirder, depending on the viewing angle:
http://www.spacetimetravel.org/tompkins/node8.html
 
A.T. said:
A cyclic process, like the rotation of the spool, will surely be subject to time dilation.

Will it? Interesting.
 
Drakkith said:
Will it? Interesting.
Consider a clock right next the rotating object. If they are synched in their rest frame, they must by synched in any frame.
 
Xavier Cross said:
So the vehicle could only move at less than half the speed of light relative to the Earth, due to the speed of the fastest forward moving edge of the spool, and an observer on the vehicle would see it as unspooling at close to the speed of light. Ironic that if a second vehicle with the same initial mass left the Earth at the same time, it would outpace the one with the unspooling tape, even though the slower one has less weight.
This is not correct. The vehicle could still move arbitrarily close to c. Given a finite material strength, there is a limit to how fast you could go before the spool and rope would break, but in principle that is not .5 c.
 
A.T. said:
Consider a clock right next the rotating object. If they are synched in their rest frame, they must by synched in any frame.

What?
 
  • #10
Drakkith said:
What?
What is unclear? Clock and rotating object are close and at relative rest. The clock ticks every time the rotating object completes a cycle. This is a frame invariant fact. So if in some other frame the clock is dilated, then so is the duration of one cycle.
 
  • #11
A.T. said:
What is unclear? Clock and rotating object are close and at relative rest. The clock ticks every time the rotating object completes a cycle. This is a frame invariant fact. So if in some other frame the clock is dilated, so the duration of one cycle.

Oh, okay. I had no idea what you meant at first.

Here's a question for you. If you put a clock on the rotating object prior to the beginning of rotation, will it be synced with the clock at rest after it spins up?
 
  • #12
Drakkith said:
If you put a clock on the rotating object prior to the beginning of rotation, will it be synced with the clock at rest after it spins up?
Depends where on the rotating object you attach the clock.

But I didn't mean a clock that is attached the rotating object. Just one that is at rest to the center of rotation. The scenario is that you have a spool attached to the Earth, and a clock standing on the Earth. If the clock is dilated then so one cycle of the spool.
 
  • #13
Got it.
 
  • #14
DaleSpam said:
This is not correct. The vehicle could still move arbitrarily close to c. Given a finite material strength, there is a limit to how fast you could go before the spool and rope would break, but in principle that is not .5 c.
I see how you came up with 0.5c, OP. The "bottom" of the spool must be at rest with respect to the "spooled out" rope; the axle is moving at the same speed as the vehicle; the "top" is moving at twice the speed of the vehicle. Speed cannot exceed c, so the vehicle's velocity cannot exceed 0.5c - right?

Unfortunately, velocities don't add that way in relativity. If the vehicle is moving at a speed u with respect to the spooled-out rope then, in the vehicle's rest frame, the top of the spool must be doing u and the bottom -u. The relativistic velocity addition formula in this case (u=±u, v=u) tells us that, in the rest frame of the spooled out rope, the bottom of the spool is at rest (obviously) but the top is doing 2u/(1+u2/c2). The velocity of the rim actually varies at different positions round the spool.
 
  • #15
Ibix said:
The velocity of the rim actually varies at different positions round the spool.
That is true even in classical mechanics. The key here is how it varies:

http://www.spacetimetravel.org/tompkins/node7.html

img38.png
 
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