Time Dilation: What is the Proper Time Interval in a Moving Spaceship?

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The discussion revolves around a time dilation problem involving a spaceship moving at 0.66c and measuring a time interval of 35 hours for events on Earth. Participants clarify the concept of proper time, emphasizing that it is measured in the reference frame where events occur at the same spatial location. The correct approach involves using the time dilation formula, with proper time being the time measured by the observer on the spaceship. After several calculations and corrections, the final answer for the time interval at 0.9c is determined to be approximately 60.323 hours. The conversation highlights the importance of accurately applying relativistic equations and understanding the definitions of proper time.
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[SOLVED] Time Dilation-AHH!

So, I feel like this should be a simple problem, but according to my online homework, none of the answers are correct.

Here's the problem:
A spaceship is moving at 0.66 c (0.66 times the speed of light) with respect to the earth. An observer on the spaceship measures the time interval between two events on Earth as 35 hrs. If the spaceship had been moving with a speed of 0.9 c with respect to the earth, what would the time interval between the events have been?

So, I used the equation T= gamma*To, and To as 35 hours, but then I thought maybe I was doing it backwards and used the 35 hours as T, and still couldn't get the right answer! Is the time interval of 35 hours the proper time interval? From what I read in the book, proper time is time as measured by an observer who sees the events occur at the same position, and is this is a time dilation problem, then the answer must be longer than 35 hours. I'm just a little frustrated, I don't know what I'm doing wrong!
 
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This seems like a homework problem. Can you please show your work? I can't know what you have done wrong, if you don't show me.
 
Using the equation delta T= gamma*delta(Tproper)...

delta T= 1/(sqrt(1-.9^2))*35 hours, getting about 81 hours.
 
(But this is wrong, but I don't know why)
 
Omg, relativity.

Can I have the link to your online homework, I want to start learning it also
 
Hint: Convert the time interval to the Earth's frame first, and then convert to the case for 0.9c.
 
shigg927 said:
From what I read in the book, proper time is time as measured by an observer who sees the events occur at the same position...
If book describes proper time is exactly the way you worded it I do not think too highly of it.

Proper time is the local elapsed time you measure when you are for instance on Earth or on a spaceship, not when you measure something away from you that is in motion with respect to you.

shigg927 said:
A spaceship is moving at 0.66 c (0.66 times the speed of light) with respect to the earth. An observer on the spaceship measures the time interval between two events on Earth as 35 hrs. If the spaceship had been moving with a speed of 0.9 c with respect to the earth, what would the time interval between the events have been?
It does not state if the spaceship is moving towards or away from the Earth which obviously makes a difference in the measurement of the interval. Possibly the creator of the problem did not even think about it or wanted the student to ignore this part, you might want to bring this up.
 
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MeJennifer said:
If book describes proper time is exactly the way you worded it I do not think too highly of it.

Proper time is the local elapsed time you measure when you are for instance on Earth or on a spaceship, not when you measure something away from you that is in motion with respect to you.

Actually, that definition is quite common. Proper time is the interval as measured in the reference frame where events occur in the same spatial coordinates. Draw a Minkowski diagram and you will see this also corresponds to the shortest period of time possible.

MeJennifer said:
It does not state if the spaceship is moving towards or away from the Earth which obviously makes a difference in the measurement of the interval. Possibly the creator of the problem did not even think about it or wanted the student to ignore this part, you might want to bring this up.

I think you can disregard the propagation of light signals from the Earth to the ship for this problem. In that case, it's irrelevant.
 
When the problem talks about an observer "measuring" a time interval one can assume that they are not talking about raw observations and that light travel time has already been corrected for. (It would be quite a different problem if that's not what's meant.)
 
  • #10
Okay, some of you guys seem to contradict one another.

So...T(earth)=T(spaceship)*gamma, correct? I get 46.588 for this, but this isn't the final answer. I get a big fat "NO" for this one.

so then I used T(.9c)=T(earth)*gamma, using .9c here and using .66c above, getting 106.880 hours. Still not right.

WHAT THE H!
 
  • #11
shigg927 said:
So...T(earth)=T(spaceship)*gamma, correct? I get 46.588 for this, but this isn't the final answer. I get a big fat "NO" for this one.

This isn't correct. The time measured in the Earth is the proper time, so it should also be the shortest interval. Think about it and check your equation.
 
  • #12
Just to check if I'm understanding the problem correctly, is the answer supposed to be 64.2 hours?
 
  • #13
No, 64.2 hours is wrong as well.
 
  • #14
I GOT IT FINALLY! Alrighty, so, T(earth) I found using 35/gamma, getting 26.294 (and using .66c for velocity). I then found T(.9c) by dividing 26.294 by gamma using .9c and getting 60.323 hours.
 
  • #15
Simple calculation errors made a huge difference, I was dividing 35 by sqrt(1-.66^2) rather than 35/[1/(sqrt(1-.66^2))]. Thanks!
 

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