wellorderingp said:
Can the ehrenfest paradox be resolved using STR or does one require to go in general theory?
Since as it is usually formulated, the paradox is set in flat spacetime, that formulation can be resolved in SR. GR is only required if spacetime is curved, i.e., if gravity is present. In the usual formulation, the "rotating disk" in the scenario is assumed to have negligible mass and therefore negligible gravity. (Note, however, that if the disk is rotating, it will be under stress, and stress is a source of gravity; so we have to also assume that the stress is small enough, which requires assumptions about the disk's mechanical properties.)
There is a version of the paradox (mentioned in the Usenet Physics FAQ article I link to below) which attempts to take into account the mass and energy of the rotating disk and its effect on the spacetime geometry; but I don't know that anyone has ever done a full analysis of this (as the article notes, it would take a "full-blown, hairy GR calculation").
Also, sometimes the paradox is said to involve GR because considering it was one of the key lines of thought that helped Einstein in developing GR.
wellorderingp said:
please recommend a book or online source which explains it from the basics.
A decent discussion can be found in this Usenet Physics FAQ article:
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/SR/rigid_disk.html
If nothing else, this article makes it clear that there are a lot of complexities lurking in what seems like a simple scenario. Also, the Wikipedia page has useful information:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ehrenfest_paradox
wellorderingp said:
I'm somewhat unclear on what exactly the paradox is,does it state that-
Since the ratio of it's circumference and diameter is less than π it follows non euclidian geometry.
It's no surprise that you're unclear on exactly what the paradox is, since many physicists have failed to agree on that. ;)
wellorderingp said:
So what if it is a non euclidian geometry? How can that statement be a paradox?
It isn't, literally speaking. It's just a very counterintuitive result; the word "paradox" can be used to mean that, not something literally self-contradictory.