What is the Minimum Speed in Relativity?

BkBkBk
Messages
32
Reaction score
0
i was thinking,C is the maximum speed something can travel through space,in there a minimum,and is this absoloute zero?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Something like Planck's length divided by Planck's time ? As going slower than that would mean standing still.
But it doesn't have to be true. And is kinda purely theoretical.
It requires quantization of space and such. In relativity... its all relative, so no..
 
Edi said:
Something like Planck's length divided by Planck's time ? As going slower than that would mean standing still.

As pointed out recently in another thread; plank length divided by Planck time is the speed of light.
 
The Planck length divided by the Planck time is c.There is no minimum speed in relativity. You can always construct a Lorentz boost to take a object's speed to whatever you want.
 
from what i can understand,does that mean that,even if an object seems not to be movingfrom your inertial frame,you could always move to a frame of reference where it is moving (have i misunderstood the lorentz boost?)
 
Yes, you can always construct a frame where an object is standing still, moving and/or accelerating.
 
Can you please direct me to the thread?
minimum distance divided by minimum time is max speed... (??)
 
Edi said:
Can you please direct me to the thread?
minimum distance divided by minimum time is max speed... (??)

Just look up the definitions. The wikipedia article on Planck units is adequate for this. The definitions and values are:
\begin{array}{lll}<br /> \text{P. time} &amp; \sqrt{\frac{\hbar G}{c^5}} &amp; 5.39 \times 10^{-44} \; s \\<br /> \text{P. dist} &amp; \sqrt{\frac{\hbar G}{c^3}} &amp; 1.616 \times 10^{-35} \; m<br /> \end{array}​

It was discussed also in the thread [thread=368108]Traveling at c-(1 Planck length/planck time), then accelerate. What happens?[/thread].

Cheers -- sylas
 
  • #10
Yes, there is a minimum speed and it is zero.
 
  • #11
we can define it as 0 relative to us,but its not specifically "at rest" is it,and what i was wondering is,even though it it isn't moving relative to us,there is uncertainty in its position,so is there a minimum we can define it to be,(or am i wrong in saying that there is uncertainty,is that only a microscopic phenomenon,or does it apply to macroscopic objects aswell?)
 
  • #12
BkBkBk said:
we can define it as 0 relative to us,but its not specifically "at rest" is it,
Why not? In our reference frame it is certainly and specifically at rest.
BkBkBk said:
and what i was wondering is,even though it it isn't moving relative to us,there is uncertainty in its position,so is there a minimum we can define it to be,(or am i wrong in saying that there is uncertainty,is that only a microscopic phenomenon,or does it apply to macroscopic objects aswell?)
That has nothing to do with relativity, that is quantum mechanics. The uncertainty principle states that \Delta x \, \Delta p = \hbar/2. So for a macroscopic object like a 70kg human body, if we were to measure it to be "at rest" to within 1 picometer/millenium then the most accurately we could know the position is:
\Delta x = \frac{\hbar}{2 \Delta p} = 0.02 \, picometer
Which should be close enough for any purpose.
 
Last edited:
  • #13
now that's the sort of answer i was looking for,thank you Dalespam :)

one thing,though, you've said "That has nothing to do with relativity" but then gone on to give me an example of a macroscopic object, I am a little confused as to whether we can actually apply the uncertainty principle to macroscopic objects?or is that still a question of where the barrier lies between the micro and macroscopic world?
 
  • #14
In quantum mechanics, if you prepare 100 "particles" (a bit hard to define what a particle is), each in an identical way, and you measure the momentum of each of 50 particles and you always get the same answer (say 0), then if you measure the position of each of the next 50 particles, you will get all sorts of different answers. However, the different positions are of different particles, so it doesn't mean that each particle did not have 0 momentum.
 
  • #15
BkBkBk said:
one thing,though, you've said "That has nothing to do with relativity" but then gone on to give me an example of a macroscopic object, I am a little confused as to whether we can actually apply the uncertainty principle to macroscopic objects?or is that still a question of where the barrier lies between the micro and macroscopic world?
Yes, the uncertainty principle always applies, there is no barrier between the micro and macroscopic world. The point was that even though it always applies, it is not always important.

In any case, more relevant to the OP, atyy just explained that the uncertainty principle does not prevent something from being at rest in some reference frame, even when we are talking about small particles.
 

Similar threads

Back
Top