Simple realtivity: Length contraction

In summary, special relativity states that the order in which we observe events is dependent on our relative speed with the system, known as the relativity of simultaneity. When measuring a moving object, such as a meter stick, both its front and back must be measured simultaneously to get an accurate length, otherwise the measurements will appear shorter or longer depending on the order they are taken. This is due to the concept of length contraction, where a moving object appears smaller in the moving frame of reference, including the distance between atoms. However, this does not mean that the object is physically deformed, it is simply a result of different perspectives in space and time. This idea also applies to time dilation, and can be demonstrated through Lorent
  • #1
seto6
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0
the proper length is the length where we can measure the length, with one clock( not moving)
and for someone looking at it as i moves it seems contracted.. how does this happen i do not under stand could someone explain

thanks in advance
Seto.
 
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  • #2
Because there is a speed-limit at which information can be transmitted, the order in which we see events, or information emerge is dependent upon our relative speed with the system in question. This is famously known as the relativity of simultaneity.

Thus is you are trying to measure a moving rod, like a meter stick, you have to measure both its front, and back simultaneously in order to get a correct measurement of length. Consider the opposite, if you have a pencil moving across a piece of paper and you use another pencil to mark where the front of the the moving pencil is first and then you mark the back end, in the time it took you to mark the front and the back the pencil has moved. thus your marks on the paper are shorter then when you were to measure the pencil not moving. If you measure the back first and then the front, your measurement is longer then the non-moving pencil length. Hence a moving frame of reference see's lengths which differ from non-moving ones.
 
  • #3
To understand stuff like the Lorentz contraction, you have to see the world as consisting of events and use the Lorentz transformations to find where events in one frame are located in another frame. If you don't do this, you'll end up creating "paradoxes" where none exist. Events that occur at the same time in one frame, don't in another, is called the relativity of simultaneity which is extremely important in resolving these "paradoxes".

So with the length contraction problem, you define 2 events as being where the ends of a moving rod are in a frame at the *same* time t. Transform these two events to where the rod is stationary and you'll find they now occur at different times, and a space difference gamma times that measured in the other frame.


Have a go at seeing if you can derive how a moving length measured in a stationary frame is transformed to a frame where it's static.
 
  • #4
Are you saying that moving objects don't physically contract (at the atomic level), they just appear to contract when viewed from a stationary frame?
 
  • #5
billspalter said:
Are you saying that moving objects don't physically contract (at the atomic level), they just appear to contract when viewed from a stationary frame?

Not sure what you have in mind by `physical contraction'. Length contraction is a genuine physical fact, but it's not to be thought of as some kind of deforming pressure that moving objects experience.

In relativity, velocity is relative, so nothing is *really* moving. Set a rod in motion, it's Lorentz contracted relative to my frame. Set MYSELF in motion, the rod is Lorentz contracted to precisely the same degree, relative to my frame.
 
  • #6
How can an objects length contract without being deformend at the atomic level?
 
  • #7
billspalter said:
How can an objects length contract without being deformend at the atomic level?

Still not sure what you have in mind or what's been said that's puzzling you. Care to expand?

In the moving frame, the rod is smaller, and the distance between atoms is smaller. Even the atoms are smaller. It's quite general.
 
  • #8
billspalter said:
How can an objects length contract without being deformend at the atomic level?

That's a good question! I was wondering the same thing myself.

yossell said:
In the moving frame, the rod is smaller, and the distance between atoms is smaller. Even the atoms are smaller. It's quite general.

I don't pretend to understand quantum physics too much but I thought that electrons in an atom can only have certain have discreet 'orbits'. These orbits wouldn't be able to physically 'contract' nor would the space between atoms without affecting the forces holding them together. Isn't that right?
 
  • #9
rede96 said:
I don't pretend to understand quantum physics too much but I thought that electrons in an atom can only have certain have discreet 'orbits'. These orbits wouldn't be able to physically 'contract' nor would the space between atoms without affecting the forces holding them together. Isn't that right?

Good question. I'm no authority, but here's my overall take:

Yes, in a marriage of quantum mechanics and relativity, you'll find that in every reference frame, the electrons can only have a discrete orbits. However, the shape of those orbits is dependent on the frame.

Some subtleties (i.e. covering myself here):

Firstly, so far, the focus has been on special relativity, and I've only been discussing the consequences of special relativity. Here, nothing much is assumed about what keeps rods stable or what keeps clocks ticking - they're just postulated as ideal devices that measure lengths and time.

Indeed, I think that standard quantum mechanics isn't relativistic, and that you have to modify the theory somewhat to get it relativistic - I think that leads to quantum field theory, but I'm not sure.

But even if the discreet results hold in Quantum Field theory, moving objects will still appear to contract. Again, I emphasise that such Lorentz contractions *mustn't* be thought of as akin to a kind of mysterious force or pressure that deforms objects, a pressure caused by the aether wind. Providing we're talking about inertial motion, there's a deformation whether the rod is moving with respect to me, or whether I leave the rod alone and am moving with respect to the rod.
 
  • #10
billspalter said:
How can an objects length contract without being deformend at the atomic level?
Do you see http://www.tpub.com/content/draftsman/14276/css/14276_311.htm"contracted circle?
That's the same (or at least a very similar) mechanism as in SR.
The circle is not deformed, you just see it from a different perspective, rotated. Instead of a third spatial dimension, things are rotated in the "time" direction in SR. You can draw diagrams of such rotations (called Lorentz transformations) to see how they really work.

To be exact, this description applies best to time dilation. Length contraction is a bit different, it's rather a "slicing" (of a cylinder in this case) than a projection of a circle.
But it's all geometry and not forces.
 
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  • #11
What I don't understand is the physics that causes the rod to contract when it is in motion.
If the atoms of the rod are smaller, are the components that define the atom (electrons, quarks, etc.) smaller as well?
In the moving frame, which of the four forces act on the rod to compress it?
 
  • #12
billspalter said:
What I don't understand is the physics that causes the rod to contract when it is in motion.
If the atoms of the rod are smaller, are the components that define the atom (electrons, quarks, etc.) smaller as well?
In the moving frame, which of the four forces act on the rod to compress it?

No stresses or forces act upon the rod (in SR). Every object is observed to be smaller in the direction of motion when observed from a frame of reference moving relative to it. If you apply this to a collection of objects the space between then appears to get smaller in the same proportion.

Matheinste.
 
  • #13
Well, it seems that I have received two contradictory answers rergarding the contracting rod. One answer implies that a deformation of the rod takes place at the atomic level and the other asserts that the rod only appears to get smaller.
Can both answers be correct?
 
  • #14
billspalter said:
Well, it seems that I have received two contradictory answers rergarding the contracting rod. One answer implies that a deformation of the rod takes place at the atomic level and the other asserts that the rod only appears to get smaller.
Can both answers be correct?

What's the contradiction? I think there's agreement, in a stationary reference frame, moving rod A contracts. In a stationary reference frame, the spaces between the atoms of the rod contract. In a stationary reference frame, the atoms themselves contract. It's just that these statements about distance and length - and time and simultaneity too - have to be relativised to a reference to make sense.

Do you want to ask: does it *really* contract or is it just an illusion? If the *really* question is a demand to know, independent of all frames, whether the rod contracts, then, according to relativity, it's a bad question. There is no frame-independent answer to questions about length. In this respect, length turns out to be like velocity - there's no absolute answer to the question of an object's velocity, independent of a frame of reference.

On the other hand, I wouldn't say it's an illusion either: that too seems to suppose that there's a question about how things really are vs how they appear.
 
  • #15
There is, as someone has already mentioned, a limit to the speed at which information can be transfered. In this case "reality" is affected by this limit too. "Reality" is what we can measure or observe. If we can't measure it then it doesn't exist. So the universal speed limit directly affects our experience of reality. So therefore, when considering length contraction of a moving rod, the rod shrinks in overall length. The parts that make up the rod all shrink, and the space between those parts is reduced also.

We know this to be true because we can mathematically prove that we could not possibly measure the length to be greater (due to the information speed limit). Therefore we can never experience, in any way, the length to be greater. Therefore the length is not greater. It REALLY has contracted.
 
  • #16
I am not sure if this will help you at all, but spacetime diagrams really helped me to conceptualize length contraction. Be patient with my crude diagrams, they should get the concept across even though they aren't pretty (or even totally straight).

Because light travels at a set speed in all frames, c, when you draw a spacetime diagram of light it must travel at a 45 degree angle (assuming you are using a system of natural units). So let's say you have one frame, A', that is moving with velocity v in the x direction relative to frame A, we will label the axis in A’ as x’ and t’. If you shine a light at time t0 in frame A' and it reflects from a mirror at event a and returns to the source at some later time t1 it will look like this:

http://imgur.com/XgtLA.jpgBut what will it look like in frame A? Well, remember light has to travel at 45 degree angles no matter what frame you are looking at (c is constant in all frames), as long as it is an inertial frame. Frame A' is moving with some velocity v relative to A so first imagine what an object moving relative to frame A with constant velocity would look like, it would be a line with angle < 45 degrees. Because A’ is moving relative to A as you move along the t’ axis (or at any point where x=constant) you are traveling some distance in frame A. So the t’ axis of frame A’ appears to be rotated by an angle relative to frame A’s t axis (the angle is related to the velocity A’ travels relative to A, and is pretty simple to work out geometrically). What about the x-axis though? Well, we label the times t0 and t1 on our rotated t’ axis, but light can only travel at 45 degrees in all frames so we draw lines that make 45 degree angles from t0 and t1 events and where they intersect is where the mirror in frame A’ appears in frame A’s coordinates. So the reflection event in A’ will look like this:

http://imgur.com/l90mX.jpg

How does this relate to length contraction? Let’s look at a rod that is at rest in the A’ frame, and draw a spacetime diagram of it in frame A. If we measure the length (proper length) in frame A’ we get a larger length then we do in Frame A:

http://imgur.com/BvOc4.jpg

Using this geometrical picture (and the concept of the spacetime interval ∆s2) you can derive the formula for length contraction, but more importantly you can visualize and understand that length contraction is a geometric effect that arises because light moves the same velocity in all inertial frames.
 
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  • #17
hold on from what i heard they do not shrink physically. is it true?

for ex take car to be 10m and a tunnel to be 5m. car moving at say .75c so, the person standing beside the tunnel will see the car as say like 4m. say the person beside the tunnel can shut both side of the tunnel after he thinks that 4m car is in side. he would cut off the rest of the 6m. correct. because of time dilation correct?
 
  • #18
To hit the question from another angle - B is moving away and the rod in B is contracting in A's frame. But it's not contracting in B's frame, is it? Please correct me if I am wrong.

So do we have the rod contracting for A and not B? Does this mean that it is only the adjustment for light to travel between frames that makes the contraction or is it really contracting?
 
  • #19
Theseus said:
To hit the question from another angle - B is moving away and the rod in B is contracting in A's frame. But it's not contracting in B's frame, is it? Please correct me if I am wrong.
You're right.
Theseus said:
So do we have the rod contracting for A and not B? Does this mean that it is only the adjustment for light to travel between frames that makes the contraction or is it really contracting?
The problem is defining what you mean by "really contracting". It is true that if in frame A you make two simultaneous measurements of the position of the front and back of the rod, and you also make simultaneous measurements of the position of the front and back in frame B, then the distance between front and back in frame A (as measured by a ruler at rest in frame A) is shorter than the distance between front and back in frame B (as measured by a ruler at rest in frame B). But because of the relativity of simultaneity different frames disagree on what it means for two measurements to be "simultaneous", and each frame is using its own ruler to measure the distance between the positions of the two measurements.

You could take a look at the diagrams I gave in this thread showing how two ruler/clock systems moving alongside each measure the other ruler to be shrunk, and the other clocks to be slowed down and out-of-sync...
 
  • #20
Theseus said:
To hit the question from another angle - B is moving away and the rod in B is contracting in A's frame. But it's not contracting in B's frame, is it? Please correct me if I am wrong.

So do we have the rod contracting for A and not B? Does this mean that it is only the adjustment for light to travel between frames that makes the contraction or is it really contracting?

It is really contracted. This is why we usually insist on the fact that the measurements are made by local observers. There is no effect due to the finite speed of propagation of light.
 
  • #21
nrqed said:
It is really contracted.
How do you define "really", though? It isn't contracted in any coordinate-independent sense, and usually coordinate-independent facts are the only ones considered truly physical.
 
  • #22
JesseM said:
How do you define "really", though? It isn't contracted in any coordinate-independent sense, and usually coordinate-independent facts are the only ones considered truly physical.

I define the length of an object in the only way that makes sense, physically, to me: the minimum length of a box that may contain the object. By "may contained the object" I mean that the box may have both of its extremities closed at the same time (in my frame) and contain the entire object. This is my definition of the length of an object (in my frame of course). I think this is the definitin of length used in special relativity.
 
  • #23
nrqed said:
It is really contracted. This is why we usually insist on the fact that the measurements are made by local observers. There is no effect due to the finite speed of propagation of light.

But if there is a ruler in A and another in B, each observer will see the other's contract while their own remains "unshrunk". So how can we say it is really contracting? I think we can only say that B contracts for A or vice versa.

JesseM - thanks for the illustration!
 
  • #24
Theseus said:
But if there is a ruler in A and another in B, each observer will see the other's contract while their own remains "unshrunk". So how can we say it is really contracting? I think we can only say that B contracts for A or vice versa.

JesseM - thanks for the illustration!


I`m sorry, I misunderstood your question.


A meter stick at rest in a frame is one meter long. A meter stick in motion relative to a given frame is shorter than 1 meter.

I was talking about a meter stick moving in a given frame, which is truly contracted from the point of view of the observers in that frame. That`s what I meant by 'truly contracted'. I thought you were asking if a moving object is truly contracted or if the length contraction is purely an effect due to the finite speed of light.

To get back to your question, you seem to be asking if an object is truly contracted in an absolute way. The answer is that distances are frame dependent. So it is meaningless in SR to ask if an object is length contracted without specifying in what frame of reference the length of the object is measured. Lengths are relative!
 
  • #25
Theseus said:
But if there is a ruler in A and another in B, each observer will see the other's contract while their own remains "unshrunk". So how can we say it is really contracting? I think we can only say that B contracts for A or vice versa.

JesseM - thanks for the illustration!

To measure the the length of something you have to record the positions of the front and rear ends at the SAME TIME. Therefore it makes no sense to compare lengths across frames. The object can appear shrunken to one observer and unshrunken to another because their experiences of time will be different.
 
  • #26
nrqed said:
To get back to your question, you seem to be asking if an object is truly contracted in an absolute way. The answer is that distances are frame dependent. So it is meaningless in SR to ask if an object is length contracted without specifying in what frame of reference the length of the object is measured. Lengths are relative!

Yes thanks. So it appears that SR is indeed a special situation of translations between non-accelerating but moving frames of reference.

Some of the earlier posters were asking if there was an actual physical contraction meaning, I believe, does the object change length in its own frame of reference? But that question doesn't seem to be allowed. SR apparently only considers reality from its chosen frame of reference and I think that is valid and no doubt useful.

But we lay people tend to think in terms of overarching truth and reality and therefore we ask such questions. Maybe it's not that way, maybe truth is relative.
 
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  • #27
The mesons from space do travel a shorter distance to Earth than what they "should be" and that's why we can measure their radioactivity at the Earth;s surface when they should theoretically burn out miles aboves us.

If we have a long flat very very thin tabletop with a circular hole in it of 9 cm in diameter. If we slide a ruler of 10 cm frictionless but still subject to 1 g of gravity at 0.6c, relative to the table, the ruler will appear to be 8 cm. As it passes over the hole past the 5 cm mark on itself or what we perceive as 4 cm (the center of gravity) the front end of the ruler will tip down ever so slightly (let us assume the table is literally completely thin) and slide through the hole and the instant the back end of the ruler passes the backside of the hole, the ruler will be totally within the hole (8 cm versus 9 cm.)

In fact, if the hole is greater than 4 cm in diameter, the ruler 10 cm but traveling at 0.6c so as to be 8 cm, the center of gravity would be at "our" 4cm and would be pass past the back back end of the hole, the ruler will tip and slide under the far end of the hole.

Capisci?
 
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  • #28
So, can you define a distance without using the local frame? The question of what is real in a contraction, is in a way, simple. If you measure a distance constantly you will find it to contract with relativistic speeds. But you can at any point stop accelerating and become in a uniform motion. And if you then walk that distance it won't change, ignoring gravity for this. That your friend will have his definition of that distance and find it take a different time relative his clock, depending on another uniform motion, is not contradicting your definition. From locality it is what you see and measure that will be your reality, and his locality can only become your if you shared the exact same frame of reference. And to do that we need to become bosons, able to be superimposed, as I see it. And another thing, maybe the question should be what 'space' is instead as it can contract/stretch relative different observations from the same observer, relative, relative motion and acceleration. and then another question becomes just as interesting, what exactly is a 'motion'?

Also it is interesting wondering about 'energy' here as we know that different relative motion gives different energy, in some later collision. And what and how that differ between uniform motion and acceleration. They do not express themselves the same, but both involve the same thing, motion.
 

1. What is length contraction in special relativity?

Length contraction is a phenomenon in special relativity where an object's length appears shorter when measured by an observer moving relative to the object.

2. How does length contraction occur?

Length contraction occurs due to the effects of time dilation and the constancy of the speed of light as predicted by Einstein's theory of relativity. As an object moves at high speeds, time slows down for that object, causing its length to appear shorter to an outside observer.

3. What is the formula for calculating length contraction?

The formula for length contraction is L = L0 x √(1 - v2/c2), where L is the length of the object as measured by the observer, L0 is the length of the object in its rest frame, v is the relative velocity between the observer and the object, and c is the speed of light.

4. Can length contraction be observed in everyday life?

Yes, length contraction can be observed in everyday life, but only at extremely high speeds that are not achievable by humans. It is only noticeable for objects moving at speeds close to the speed of light.

5. How does length contraction affect our understanding of space and time?

Length contraction is one of the key principles of special relativity that helps us understand the relationship between space and time. It shows us that space and time are not absolute, but rather relative to the observer's frame of reference. It also helps explain the concept of time dilation and the idea that time passes differently for objects in motion compared to those at rest.

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