B Speed of Point on Expanding Sphere

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The discussion centers on the speed of a point on the surface of an expanding sphere, specifically whether the sphere's expansion limits this speed. It is established that, according to special relativity (SR), the speed of any particle is limited to the speed of light, c, regardless of the sphere's expansion. The mathematical representation of the sphere's radius over time is given as r(t) = b t, where b is a positive constant. Participants question how the expansion affects a particle's tangential velocity on the surface, noting that clarification of the scenario is necessary for a definitive answer. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the interplay between mathematical modeling and physical constraints in understanding motion on an expanding surface.
Ad VanderVen
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TL;DR
Suppose we have an expanding sphere. That means that the surface ##4 \Pi r^{2}## is getting bigger and bigger. For example, suppose the area expansion rate is ##b r##. Does this limit the speed at which a point can move on the surface?

Reference: https://www.physicsforums.com/forums/special-and-general-relativity.70/post-thread
Suppose we have an expanding sphere. That means that the surface ##4 \pi r^{2}## is getting bigger and bigger. For example, suppose the area expansion rate is ##b \, r##. Does this limit the speed at which a point can move on the surface?
 
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Limit in what way? In SR the speed of a particle as measured in an IRF is limited by ##c##. Having an expanding physical object, if that is what you mean, doesn't change that.
 
PS the link in the OP doesn't lead anywhere.
 
PeroK said:
PS the link in the OP doesn't lead anywhere.
I do not know how to re-edt the summary.
 
PeroK said:
Limit in what way? In SR the speed of a particle as measured in an IRF is limited by ##c##. Having an expanding physical object, if that is what you mean, doesn't change that.
I mean it purely mathematically.
 
Ad VanderVen said:
I mean it purely mathematically.
I mean ##r(t) \, = \, b \, t## where ##t## represents time and ##0 \, < \, b##..
 
Ad VanderVen said:
I mean ##r(t) \, = \, b \, t## where ##t## represents time and ##0 \, < \, b##..
And ##r## is the distance from the center of the sphere to a particle on the surface of the sphere (using an inertial frame in which the center of the sphere is at rest)?

Then ##\frac{dr}{dt}=b## is the speed of that particle using that frame. It will of course be less than ##c##.
 
Ad VanderVen said:
I do not know how to re-edt the summary.
Report your post, include the correct link in your report, and one of us mentors can fix it for you.
 
Ad VanderVen said:
I mean it purely mathematically.
There's no purely mathematical limit on the speed of a particle. But, if you apply the theory of SR, then there is a limit.
 
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Ad VanderVen said:
TL;DR Summary: Suppose we have an expanding sphere. That means that the surface ##4 \Pi r^{2}## is getting bigger and bigger. For example, suppose the area expansion rate is ##b r##. Does this limit the speed at which a point can move on the surface?

Reference: https://www.physicsforums.com/forums/special-and-general-relativity.70/post-thread

Suppose we have an expanding sphere. That means that the surface ##4 \pi r^{2}## is getting bigger and bigger. For example, suppose the area expansion rate is ##b \, r##. Does this limit the speed at which a point can move on the surface?
So you are asking about the idea of an object that is confined to the expanding surface but which may be moving across that surface?

If the object is "coasting" across the surface, what happens to its speed as the surface expands? Does it retain its original tangential velocity? Or is its tangential velocity amplified by the expansion of the surface?

Neither physics nor mathematics can answer that question. Only clarification on the setup of the situation can answer it.