i may be wrong..... just warning you...
proper time and proper length are measure by the observer in that is stationary relative to the moving frame of reference.
for example: a man (or woman
) travelling on a rocket that is 15m long, at the speed of 0.5c, will measure their rocket to also be 15m long. and observer on earth will measure the length of the rocket to be less than the real 15m (proper length), but measure it to be 12.99m (contracted length). hence proper length is measure by the observer in the rocket and contracted length is measure by the observe on earth.
BUT, if the observer on the Earth had a 2m long broom stick, the person on the rocket will measure it to be 1.7m. so in this case, the earth observer will measure proper length and the person on the rocket will measure contracted length as the observer on Earth, relative to the rocket, is moving at 0.5c. same thing happens with time except it dilate.
for your question in regards to the Muon, the event can be seen in a way that we are moving towards the muon and the muon is stationary....
so in this case, we are the observer that measures proper time and length as we are stationary in our frame of reference and the muon is moving towards us.
this is why we can detect muons on the surface of earth even though they have a half life of 2 microseconds . because of their fast speed 0.998 c , time for the muon is dilated ( i.e. it lives longer) and length contracts ( hence the distance it has to travel is less that the proper length it has to travel).
some one correct me please
, i don't think i got the hang of it yet