DanPease said:
Well I wanted too know why an object with mass can't travel at the speed of light with reference to SR.
DanPease said:
Sweet guys thanks for the help. Would anyone be kind enough too explain length contraction??
DanPease said:
Ok guys, why does time dilation happen?? What is it about the speed of light that warps time?
The best way I know to answer all your questions is for you to learn about the Lorentz Transformation process and to draw spacetime diagrams. I'll start with a simple situation where an observer, shown in blue, is measuring the round-trip speed of light by sending a pulse of light towards a mirror shown in red that is mounted 3 feet away. He has a clock that measures the time the light is emitted and the time the reflection gets back to himself. Since the speed of light is one foot per nanosecond, his clock advances by 6 nanoseconds during the time the light propagates 3 feet to the mirror (shown as the thin blue line) and 3 feet back (shown as the thin red line). I've shown the observer's time in blue. The time for the mirror is shown in red. The dots mark off 1-nanosecond increments of time for the observer and for the mirror. Note that these two times are not synchronized:
Now I'm going to transform the coordinates of all the events (the dots) to a new frame moving at 0.6c (or 0.6 feet per nsec):
The Time Dilation factor at 0.6c is 1.25. Note that the dots are stretched out so that 4 nsec for each clock takes 4 times 1.25 or 5 nsec of Coordinate Time.
Also note that the spacing between the observer and the mirror has been reduced from 3 feet to 3/1.25=2.4 feet. To see this, look at the Coordinate Time of 0 and you will see that the observer is at 0 feet while the mirror is at 2.4 feet.
And finally note that the pulse of light and its reflection continue to propagate at 1 foot per nsec and is emitted by the observer, reflected at the mirror, and received by the observer with the same times as in the original frame.
Now we want to add in the configuration from the first diagram as an extension to this diagram:
This represents an acceleration of the observer and an earlier acceleration of the mirror such that they are both at rest in the new frame. The observer makes the same measurement of the round-trip speed of light as he did before accelerating, just with his clock advanced by 6 nsec (and the time on the mirror advanced by 8 nsec). Note that the two times are even more out of sync than they were during the first segment.
We can repeat the process again:
Note that the observer again has the same experience as before, just with his clock advanced by 6 more nsecs and the time for the mirror advanced by 8 nsec and the two times getting more out of synch. Also note that the previous segment has the same Time Dilation and Length Contraction as the original segment did in the previous frame and the original segment in this frame has more Time Dilation and more Length Contraction than it did in the previous frame.
Now I'm going to repeat the process one more time but I'm only going to show the last part of the scenario in the same scale as the previous one:
Aside from the differences in the coordinates and the advancing of the times, you can see the exact same image of the previous diagram in this one and we could repeat the process as many times as we wanted with the same result. In other words, no matter how much the observer accelerates, he is no closer to the speed of light than when he started.
Here is one more diagram showing the entire scenario but drawn at one-half the scale so that it will fit on one page:
Any questions?