Two light sources are a distance D apart

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The discussion centers on the application of Lorentz transformations to analyze two light sources emitting photons simultaneously in one frame and their coordinates in another moving frame. It highlights the confusion regarding the emergence of the time difference of D/c when both events are simultaneous in the original frame. Participants emphasize the importance of time coordinates in defining spatial separation for moving objects and the implications of simultaneity in different frames. The conversation also touches on potential algebraic mistakes and the need for careful consideration of constraints when transforming coordinates. Ultimately, the discussion underscores the complexities of relativistic transformations and the necessity of clear definitions in physics.
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Homework Statement
Two light sources are at rest and at a distance D apart on the x-axis of some inertial frame, O. They emit photons simultaneously in that frame in the positive x-direction. Show that in an inertial frame, O', in which the sources have a velocity v along the x-axis, the photons are separated by a constant distance $$D\sqrt{\frac{c-u}{c+u}}$$
Relevant Equations
$$D\sqrt{\frac{c-u}{c+u}}$$
$$x_2-x_1 =D$$
I let E1 be the event where source 1 emits the photon and E2 for the second source with the respective coordinates in O as $(x_1, t_1$) and $(x_2,t_2)$ such that $t_2=t_1 \because$ simultaneous and $x_2-x_1 =D$.

Using Lorentz transformation I obtained that in O', $$x'_2-x'_1 = \gamma (D-v(t_2-t_1))=\gamma D \ \because t_2 = t_1$$ In the solutions $$t_2-t_1 = \frac{D}{c} $$ however I cannot see where this came from.
 
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romanski007 said:
Using Lorentz transformation I obtained that in O', $$x'_2-x'_1 = \gamma (D-v(t_2-t_1))=\gamma D \ \because t_2 = t_1$$
Okay, these are the ##x'## coordinates of events E1 and E2. What about the time coordinates ##t'## of these events?

Note that you apparently have length dilation there: ##D' = \gamma D##(?)
 
PeroK said:
Okay, these are the ##x'## coordinates of events E1 and E2. What about the time coordinates ##t'## of these events?

Note that you apparently have length dilation there: ##D' = \gamma D##(?)

Why do I need ##t'## coordinates if I am only considering the length difference in O' ? Furthermore in O, how does the time difference of ##\frac{D}{c}## emerge if both events are simultaneous in O.
 
romanski007 said:
Why do I need ##t'## coordinates if I am only considering the length difference in O' ?
There are many ways to answer that! One answer is why not compute the time coordinates just to see?

Another answer is: what does it mean to say that two moving objects are a certain distance apart? How do you define spatial separation for two moving objects?

Hint: does simultaneity of measurements have anything to do with it?
 
PeroK said:
There are many ways to answer that! One answer is why not compute the time coordinates just to see?

Another answer is: what does it mean to say that two moving objects are a certain distance apart? How do you define spatial separation for two moving objects?

Hint: does simultaneity of measurements have anything to do with it?

Oh so actually it's ## t'_1 = t'_2 ##, so in that case, ##x_2-x_1 = D + c(t_2 - t_1 ) ## as both sources would emit light simultaneously and hence
$$x_2'-x_1' = \gamma (D + c(t_2 - t_1) - v(t_2 - t_1)$$ and since in O', the event is simultaneous, I got
$$t_2'-t_1' = 0 = \gamma \[ t_2 - t_1 - \frac{v}{c^2} (D + c (t_2 - t_1)) \]$$
which simplifies to $$t_2 - t_1 = \frac{vD}{c(c-v)}$$
Hence substituting for ##t_2 - t_1## I got
$$x_2' - x_1' = \gamma (D + \frac{vD}{c-v} - \frac{v^2 D }{c(c-v})$$
$$x_2' - x_1 ' = \gamma D \frac {c+v}{c}= D \sqrt {\frac{c+v}{c-v}}$$
Did I commit some algebraic mistake or perhaps + and - as an answer were mistaken?
 
romanski007 said:
Oh so actually it's ## t'_1 = t'_2 ##, so in that case, ##x_2-x_1 = D + c(t_2 - t_1 ) ## as both sources would emit light simultaneously and hence
$$x_2'-x_1' = \gamma (D + c(t_2 - t_1) - v(t_2 - t_1)$$ and since in O', the event is simultaneous, I got
$$t_2'-t_1' = 0 = \gamma \[ t_2 - t_1 - \frac{v}{c^2} (D + c (t_2 - t_1)) \]$$
which simplifies to $$t_2 - t_1 = \frac{vD}{c(c-v)}$$
Hence substituting for ##t_2 - t_1## I got
$$x_2' - x_1' = \gamma (D + \frac{vD}{c-v} - \frac{v^2 D }{c(c-v})$$
$$x_2' - x_1 ' = \gamma D \frac {c+v}{c}= D \sqrt {\frac{c+v}{c-v}}$$
Did I commit some algebraic mistake or perhaps + and - as an answer were mistaken?
Have you seen the derivation of length contraction? In any case, you need to be more careful about using ##D = x_2 - x_1##. That's only true if ##x_1, x_2## represent the sources at the same time in the unprimed frame. If you take events which are simultaneous in frame ##S'##, they do not map to events that are simultaneous in frame ##S##, hence do not map to events where ##x_2 - x_1 = D##.

You need to take more care.
 
PeroK said:
Have you seen the derivation of length contraction? In any case, you need to be more careful about using ##D = x_2 - x_1##. That's only true if ##x_1, x_2## represent the sources at the same time in the unprimed frame. If you take events which are simultaneous in frame ##S'##, they do not map to events that are simultaneous in frame ##S##, hence do not map to events where ##x_2 - x_1 = D##.

You need to take more care.

In relation to the attached diagram, I described the position of ##x_1, x_2 ## and hence took their difference, and transformed it to the primed reference frame where ##t' = ## constant
 

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romanski007 said:
In relation to the attached diagram, I described the position of ##x_1, x_2 ## and hence took their difference, and transformed it to the primed reference frame where ##t' = ## constant
You have too many constraints there: you demand that ##x_2 = x_1 + D## and that ##t'_1 = t'_2##. You cannot have both those equations:
$$t'_1 = t'_2 \ \Rightarrow \ t_1 \ne t_2 \ \Rightarrow \ x_2 \ne x_1 + D$$
 
PS this is even clearer if you take the first event to be the (common) origin of the frames. Then the second event is: ##(0, D)## in the first frame and ##(t'_2, x'_2)## in the second frame, where ##t'_2 \ne 0##.

If you want ##t'_2 = 0##, then you need to choose a different event: ##(t_1, x_1)## where necessarily ##t_1 \ne 0## and ##x_1 \ne D##.
 
  • #10
PeroK said:
You have too many constraints there: you demand that x2=x1+D and that t1′=t2′. You cannot have both those equations:
t1′=t2′ ⇒ t1≠t2 ⇒ x2≠x1+D

Yes, the way I worked it out was by letting ##x_2 = x_0 + D + ct_2 ## and ##x_1 = x_0 + ct_1## so that ##x_2 -x_1 = D + c(t_2 - t_1) ##
 
  • #11
PeroK said:
PS this is even clearer if you take the first event to be the (common) origin of the frames. Then the second event is: ##(0, D)## in the first frame and ##(t'_2, x'_2)## in the second frame, where ##t'_2 \ne 0##.

If you want ##t'_2 = 0##, then you need to choose a different event: ##(t_1, x_1)## where necessarily ##t_1 \ne 0## and ##x_1 \ne D##.

I did it in the first case so that
$$x_2'-x_1' = \gamma (x_2 - x_1 - v (t_2 - t_1) = \gamma D \because t_2 - t_1 = 0 $$ but the final answer impliesthat $$t_2-t_1 = \frac{D}{c} $$
 
  • #12
romanski007 said:
Yes, the way I worked it out was by letting ##x_2 = x_0 + D + ct_2 ## and ##x_1 = x_0 + ct_1## so that ##x_2 -x_1 = D + c(t_2 - t_1) ##

Okay, yes I see that now. Apologies.

You may have done the wrong transformation. The sources are the "moving frame", so you want the inverse transformation.
 
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