Thought experiment: Orbiting bodies close to C

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the implications of relativistic speeds on orbital mechanics and the nature of motion within a galaxy. Participants explore thought experiments involving a solar system moving at speeds close to the speed of light (c) and the effects on orbiting bodies, as well as the concept of absolute motion and the speed of light as a universal limit.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that orbiting bodies in a solar system moving at close to c would eventually move in the same direction as their sun, raising questions about momentum and gravitational effects during acceleration or deceleration.
  • Another participant counters that the velocities of orbiting bodies are small compared to their star, treating the system as a closed system and implying that they would not fall into the sun.
  • A different viewpoint emphasizes that there is no absolute motion, suggesting that the system's motion relative to the galaxy does not affect the internal dynamics of the solar system.
  • Some participants discuss the implications of living in a solar system moving at near c, questioning whether objects could be accelerated to speeds greater than c from their perspective while remaining below c from an external observer's viewpoint.
  • One participant introduces a formula for calculating relative velocities, prompting further questions about the nature of speed and the speed of light as a universal limit.
  • Concerns are raised about the implications of relativistic speeds on observations between different observers, particularly in scenarios involving multiple ships moving towards each other at significant fractions of c.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the nature of motion and the effects of relativistic speeds on gravitational interactions. There is no consensus on the implications of these concepts, and the discussion remains unresolved regarding the effects of high-speed motion on orbital dynamics and the nature of the universe.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference concepts such as absolute motion, relative velocities, and the speed of light, but these discussions are laden with assumptions and unresolved mathematical considerations. The implications of these ideas are not fully explored, leaving gaps in understanding.

Kalibr
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Hi all, I was bored a little while ago, and somehow started thinking about the Big bang and all that fun stuff. I once heard it said that some of the galaxies near the end of the universe are at close to light speed. Now I'm not here to dispute that (would be nice if it were true though) but another thought struck me.

If you had, say, a sun in a solar system moving at close to c away from the center of the galaxy, the orbiting bodies in that system will probably at some point have to be moving in the same direction as it's sun. When you start changing acceleration (or deceleration) at close to c you need enormous amounts of energy to make the shift, something about mass changing at that speed. So wouldn't these orbiting bodies just lose their momentum or something and fall into their sun? What would happen?
 
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Hi there,

Not really since the orbiting bodies have only small velocities compared to their star, like the Earth around the Sun being roughly 30km/s, not 30km/s + speed around galaxy. The system can be seen pretty much as a closed system.

Cheers
 
I once heard it said that some of the galaxies near the end of the universe are at close to light speed.

The is no beginning nor end to the universe in the sense you imply; however, objects at tremendous interstellar distances from an observer do appear to be receding at increasing velocities due to cosmological expansion...space between the observer and a distant body is

lf expanding...Hubble discovered this experimentally. Earth would appear to be receding very fast from an observer, for example, 1,000 universes away to our east...

The "end of the universe" for us (and for all other observers who also have their own cosmological horizon limits) is the cosmological horizon: we are limited in what we can observe because some light, if distant enough in origin, will never reach us...


If you had, say, a sun in a solar system moving at close to c away from the center of the galaxy,

I don't think that happens within a typical galaxy. Massive objects move much more slowly, maybe 18,000 miles per hour for example, I think is an orbital speed of earth...relative to our sun. A sun in one solar system moving rather "slowly" in it's local orbit might well appear to be moving much more rapidly to a distant observer located in a far distant galaxy as described above.

But I think your basic idea is correct: any massive body in a group of other bodies affects all others. If one suddenly explodes or collides and it's effective position changes, all the other bodies must also shift according to gravitational laws. For example, if something crashed into our moon, and blew it apart, things here on Earth would be dramatically disrupted...perhaps massive tidal waves to start...
 
Kalibr said:
If you had, say, a sun in a solar system moving at close to c away from the center of the galaxy, the orbiting bodies in that system will probably at some point have to be moving in the same direction as it's sun. When you start changing acceleration (or deceleration) at close to c you need enormous amounts of energy to make the shift, something about mass changing at that speed. So wouldn't these orbiting bodies just lose their momentum or something and fall into their sun? What would happen?

There is no such animal as absolute motion. So while the system is moving at near c relative to the center of the galaxy, it is not moving at all relative to itself. In other words, it is prefectly acceptable to describe the same scenario as the center of the galaxy moving away from the system at c. (there is no way to say which one is "really" moving.) So no, the planets wouldn't fall inot the star, because they wouldn't do so if the system was had no relative motion with respect to the center of the galaxy. Any relativistic effects are only measured by someone who has a relative motion wih respect to the system.
 
Janus said:
There is no such animal as absolute motion. So while the system is moving at near c relative to the center of the galaxy, it is not moving at all relative to itself. In other words, it is prefectly acceptable to describe the same scenario as the center of the galaxy moving away from the system at c. (there is no way to say which one is "really" moving.) So no, the planets wouldn't fall inot the star, because they wouldn't do so if the system was had no relative motion with respect to the center of the galaxy. Any relativistic effects are only measured by someone who has a relative motion wih respect to the system.

Does this mean that theoretically, one could live on a solar system moving at close to c away from the center of the universe (blame it on the big bang) and they could live, work, live and play in such a system? And could they then theoretically accelerate objects away from our observational point at the center of the universe at a speed faster than c, but perfectly reasonable from their standpoint?

Naty1 said:
I don't think that happens within a typical galaxy. Massive objects move much more slowly, maybe 18,000 miles per hour for example, I think is an orbital speed of earth...relative to our sun. A sun in one solar system moving rather "slowly" in it's local orbit might well appear to be moving much more rapidly to a distant observer located in a far distant galaxy as described above.

But I think your basic idea is correct: any massive body in a group of other bodies affects all others. If one suddenly explodes or collides and it's effective position changes, all the other bodies must also shift according to gravitational laws. For example, if something crashed into our moon, and blew it apart, things here on Earth would be dramatically disrupted...perhaps massive tidal waves to start...

I'm sorry, that was an error on my behalf. I meant the center of the universe.
 
Kalibr said:
Does this mean that theoretically, one could live on a solar system moving at close to c away from the center of the universe (blame it on the big bang) and they could live, work, live and play in such a system? And could they then theoretically accelerate objects away from our observational point at the center of the universe at a speed faster than c, but perfectly reasonable from their standpoint?

There is no "center" to the Universe.

But if you were in a star system traveling at near c relative to me, you could accelerate something up to near c relative to you. However, I would measure that same object as moving at less than c (but closer to c than you are moving.) relative to me. For example, if you are moving at .99c relative to me, and accelerate it to .99c relative to yourself from your standpoint, I would measure it as moving at.9999495c relative to me.
 
Janus said:
There is no "center" to the Universe.

But if you were in a star system traveling at near c relative to me, you could accelerate something up to near c relative to you. However, I would measure that same object as moving at less than c (but closer to c than you are moving.) relative to me. For example, if you are moving at .99c relative to me, and accelerate it to .99c relative to yourself from your standpoint, I would measure it as moving at.9999495c relative to me.

That totally wrecks my ideas about the universe. How did you arrive at that number?
But does this also mean that if I were in a ship traveling at .6c towards another ship traveling at .6c in the opposite direction, then each ship would still observe the other traveling at a speed less than, but close to c?

And finally, is the speed of light merely a cap on the speeds we can observe, or is it a universal cap on all speeds, and if it is a universal cap, where is the reference point?
 
Kalibr said:
That totally wrecks my ideas about the universe. How did you arrive at that number?
V_t = \frac{v_1+v_2}{\frac{1+v_1v_2}{c^2}}
But does this also mean that if I were in a ship traveling at .6c towards another ship traveling at .6c in the opposite direction, then each ship would still observe the other traveling at a speed less than, but close to c?
Yes, at 0.882c.
And finally, is the speed of light merely a cap on the speeds we can observe, or is it a universal cap on all speeds, and if it is a universal cap, where is the reference point?

It is the limit for the relative speed between any two objects as measured by those objects. There is no absolute reference point to measure the speed of light from, because everyone measures light as moving at c relative to themselves.
 
Thanks, that really cleared it up for me. And here I was thinking I'd found a loophole in relativity :-p
 

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