Two events are observed in a frame of reference S to occur at the same space point, the second occurring 1.80 s after the first. In a frame S′ moving relative to S, the second event is observed to occur 2.15 s after the first. What is the difference between the positions of the two events as measured in S′?
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Two events are observed in a frame of reference S to occur at the same space point, the second occurring 1.80 s after the first. In a frame S′ moving relative to S, the second event is observed to occur 2.15 s after the first. What is the difference between the positions of the two events as measured in S′?
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- There is a spaceship that moves past us with a speed of (3/5)c and it has a rest length of 1000 m. Two clocks on the ship's nose and tail have been synchronized with each other in the ship's frame of reference. (On the ground, we have many clocks that are synchronized with each other in our frame.) When the nose of the spaceship reaches us, both our clock as well as the clock in the ship's nose read t = 0. At this time (t = 0 to us), what will the clock in the ship's tail read and in what time will the tail reach us?The proper length of one spaceship is three times that of another. The two spaceships are traveling in the same direction and, while both are passing overhead, an Earth observer measures the two spaceships to have the same length. If the slower spaceship has a speed of 0.354c with respect to Earth, determine the speed of the faster spaceship. (Give your answer to at least 3 significant figures.) |cSuppose 5 rocketships are all traveling in â in some frame S. The speeds are: St (min) 100 B 0 0.25 0.5 0.75 0.99 7 1 How much time passes on the clocks inside each rocketship if 100 minutes elapse on the stationary rocketship?
- The space and time coordinates for two events as measured in a frame S are as follows: Event 1: x1=x0 , t1=x0/c Event 2: x2=2x0, t2=x0/2c a. There exists a frame in which these events occur at the same time. Find the velocity of this frame with respect to S. b. What is the value of t at which both events occur in the new frame?Jose is at rest in System S' that has a velocity u = +0.46c relative to system S, where Cisco is at rest. The clocks of S and S' are synchronized at t = t' = 0 when the origins O and O' coincide. An event is observed in both systems. The event takes place at x = 574 m and at time t = 1.70 μs, as measured by Cisco in S. What is the x'-coordinate of the event in meters, measured by Jose in S'? Please give your answer with no decimal places.An electron moving at 0.80c relative to the Earth reference frame travels the 100m length of a building (as measured in the Earth reference frame). What is the length of the building according to an observer moving along with the electron?
- Earth and a star are 20 light years (ly) apart, measured in a frame at rest with respect to Earth and star. Twin A boards a spaceship, travels at 0.80c to the star, and then returns immediately to Earth at 0.80c. Determine the round-trip travel times in Earth and ship refer- ence frames.Observers in reference frame S see an explosion located at x1=620 m. A second explosion occurs 6.0 micro-s later at x2=1500 m.In reference frame S', which is moving along the +x-axis at speed V, the explosions occur at the same point in space. What is the separation in time delta t' between the two explosions as measured in frame S'? Express your answer in microseconds (micro-s). delta t' = ? micro-sObserver A sees two events at the same place (Ax = Ay = Az = 0) and separated in time by Ar = 10-6 s. A second observer B sees them to be separated by Ar' = 2 × 10-6 s. What is the separation in space of the two events according to B? What is the speed of B relative to A?
- A person on Earth observes two rocket ships moving directly toward each other and colliding as shown in the figure below. At time t = 0 in the Earth frame, the Earth observer determines that rocket A, travelling to the right at vA = 0.80c, is at point a, and rocket B is at point b, travelling to the left at vB = 0.60c. According to the Earth observer they are separated by a distance l = 4.2 x 108 m as shown in the other figure. How much time will elapse in frame A from the time rocket A passes point auntil collision?A rocket measures 100 m long in its own frame (S') and is travelling at 0.995c relative to a frame S. At the tail of the rocket, a laser sends out a pulse of light which is reflected by a mirror at the nose of the rocket. (a) At what time after emission, measured in S', does the light pulse arrive back at the tail of the rocket? (b) At what time after emission, measured in S, does the light pulse arrive back at the tail of the rocket? (c) What is the spatial distance, measured in S, between the emis- sion of the pulse and its arrival back at the tail of the rocket? (d) At what time after emission, measured in S, does the light pulse hit the mirror? (e) What is the spatial distance, measured in S, between the emis- sion of the pulse and its hitting the mirror? (f) Can you conclude from your answers that the light pulse travelled at a different speed, as seen in S, on its way to the mirror than on the way back? If not, explain your results