NightShadow
Member
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2004
- Messages
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- HSC
- 2006
ok what was the wording of the question?? did the question say that the distance travelled was 0.24m in the reference frame of the particle?
sorry to burst ur bubble fuckbags but unfortunately u are dip shits. the theory of relativity states that it is impossible to determine whether an object is in relative motion or stationary. and as .6c is a constant velocity, let me know if im going to fast douche bags, a measurement of lenght contraction from the electron would tell that electron that it was moving, but this is impossible, the lenght measured by the electron in relative motion is the same as its rest length relative to it, or lo, so again i say suck it, you lose, how do u dickheads say pwned or sum sht, im pretty sure u realise u are now wrong because none of u blokes/girls are smart enough to challenge einstein and if u were u probably would have got this right.NightShadow said:I'm sorry yorky but: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/relativ/muon.html
you got fucking owned...
I didn't read the question properly and i thought that 0.24m was the distance as observed by us...fuck i so bombed that paper..whY god do you have to be like thaT
wat bout in reply to what i had?yorky said:sorry to burst ur bubble fuckbags but unfortunately u are dip shits. the theory of relativity states that it is impossible to determine whether an object is in relative motion or stationary. and as .6c is a constant velocity, let me know if im going to fast douche bags, a measurement of lenght contraction from the electron would tell that electron that it was moving, but this is impossible, the lenght measured by the electron in relative motion is the same as its rest length relative to it, or lo, so again i say suck it, you lose, how do u dickheads say pwned or sum sht, im pretty sure u realise u are now wrong because none of u blokes/girls are smart enough to challenge einstein and if u were u probably would have got this right.
note, tht's onli the train undergoing contraction.edward88 said:check this shit then
http://hsc.csu.edu.au/physics/core/space/9_2_4/924net.html#net15
owned biatches
if u werent before, u r now
yeah .. so lets use a diagram:yorky said:ur on the right track but not really, it is squished, but that means a width increase, length contracts in the direction of motion, congratulations ur answer of .1912 is correct, the constant motion frame of reference is the same as rest, and therefore measurement of .24m relative to electron in constant motion is its god damn rest lenght, an observer in relative motion i.e. stationary lv, is going to see the length contraction .1912m, if u dickheads dont understand this then no wonder u got it wrong
thank u finnaly sum1 with sumthing intelligent to say, u and eddy are the only decent comments on this thread, thanks liz, smart girlLizcat said:this is how i thought of it, and i got 0.19
its like any normal Q, pretent the electron is in the space craft, and the laboratory is the observer on earth.
so that means that 0.24 is the proper length, so we want to measure Lv,
so its 0.24x0.8 =0.19m
dude ur overthinking it, it contracts, but only observers in different frame of reference can see contractionshinji said:yeah .. so lets use a diagram:
normal train; with velocity to the right at a low speed
|<---------------------------------->|
train undergoing velocity of 0.9c going to the right
|<-------->| [hypothetically]
therefore, wouldn't it cover a larger distance? o_o