paragraph 1:Originally posted by Morgantic
Guys... the answer is 8.77777777.....
The spaceship has moved towards the speed of light, therefore undergone relativistic effects. So the time on earth is 16.77777777 when the ship arrives at this imaginary star, but because the star is 8 lightyears away from earth (0.8c x 10 years), the clock will only show 8.7777777 from the perspective of that spaceship at that star, because the light of the clock travels at the speed of light like all light
Whoever argues that it is the earth that moves is an idiot, as no energy is put into the earth to accelerate it to these speeds, otherwise the earth would gain a lot of mass by relativity for no specific reason and with no energy input to itself.
The BOS is crap, that question didn't give enough information to fully understand what was happening, neither did it give a correct answer.
sentence 1: everything undergoes relativistic effect.
sentence 2: you're confused with your distances. it's 8 lightyears for the spaceship but it's 80/6 = 13.3 light years for earth.
and
The derivations for those relationships in the lorentz transformations are slightly more complex than just thinking about the lag that light requires to travel.
paragraph 2:
general comments:
You should already know that mass is not absolute, the mass of something is lightest when observed from it's own frame. Earth will not gain mass from the earth's point of view even if it's the earth which moved and the earth will always be heavier than it's rest mass to the astronaut in the spaceship.
back to your point on acceleration, the question stated that the ship travelled at 0.8 c and the journey took 10 years as seen on the spaceship. acceleration and other weirdo general relativistic effects is not an issue here, time is measured after the spaceship is accelerated.
paragraph 3:
hmm no comment on that, perhaps I agree in secret