Non-parallel Relativistic Velocity Addition

AI Thread Summary
A spaceship moves at (4/5)c relative to Earth, and an astronaut throws a beer bottle at (3/5)c sideways relative to the ship. The classical velocity of the bottle is calculated using the Pythagorean theorem, yielding a magnitude of c. For the relativistic calculation, the correct application of the Velocity Addition equations is crucial, with the astronaut realizing that u_x' should be 0 since the bottle only moves in the y' direction. After correcting initial errors, the final relativistic velocity of the bottle is determined to be approximately 0.877c.
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Homework Statement



(d) A spaceship moves with velocity (4/5)c relative to Earth. The astronaut throws his empty beer bottle out the window with velocity (3/5)c relative to the ship in the sideways direction. What is the velocity of the bottle (magnitude and direction) relative to the Earth (i) classically, (ii) relativistically?

Homework Equations



Velocity Addition (relativistic)

u_x = \frac {u_x' + v}{1 + \frac{v}{c} \frac{u_x'}{c}}

u_y = \frac {u_y' + v}{\gamma (1 + \frac{v}{c} \frac{u_x'}{c})}

Pythagorean Theorem

The Attempt at a Solution



I just want to know if I've done this correctly. This is a problem on a practice exam.

For the classical portion I just used the Pythagorean theorem \sqrt {(\frac{4c}{5})^2 + (\frac{3c}{5})^2} = c

For the relativistic portion I use the Velocity Addition equations. I use v = \frac{4}{5}c = u_x'and u_y' = \frac{3}{5}c

This gives:

u_y = \frac{15}{41}c

and using the Pythagorean theorem with u_x = (4/5)c I get \frac{13}{15}c = .866 cI am embarrassed to say that I only think it's the right answer because it looks like it would be. Conceptually I have no idea why I would set both u_x' and v equal to 4/5 c. Can anybody explain if I did get it correct, and if I didn't how I might get the correct answer? Thank you!
 
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stefan10 said:
u_y = \frac {u_y' + v}{\gamma (1 + \frac{v}{c} \frac{u_x'}{c})}

This equation cannot be correct. For the case ##u_y' = 0## what would you expect ##u_y## to be?

Other than your result for ##u_y##, I think the rest of your work looks good (as far as method).

EDIT: I now see another error. You wrote
v = \frac{4}{5}c = u_x'

Shouldn't ##u_x' = 0##? Relative to the ship, the bottle moves only in the y' direction.
Maybe you meant to write v = \frac{4}{5}c = u_x. That would give you the value ##u_x## = ##\frac{4}{5}c## that you used later.
 
Last edited:
Ah nevermind, I see what I did wrong the first time when I tried it with u_x' = 0. I must've been tired and reduced the fraction incorrectly, making it seem as if my final result was incorrect. Also the U_y equation I posted was not the one I used, it's a typo from copying and pasted the latex code for U_x and forgetting to delete (+v). Thank you very much, I have the correct answer now to be, (481)^(1/2)c/25 = .877 c
 
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