Week 2
Week 2
Problem 1: Estimates of β
As we have discussed, special relativity is “only” important when we are dealing with velocities
close to the speed of light, defined to be c = 299792458 m/s exactly. A useful quantity to
estimate the size of relativistic effects is therefore β = v/c. Estimate the magnitude of β for:
c) The cruise speed of a Concorde supersonic passenger airliner, which could fly from New
York to London in under 3 hours.
d) The orbital motion of a satellite in a geosynchronous orbit above the Earth’s equator.
a) Expand γ in a Taylor series in powers of β 2 , keeping the first three terms. Evaluate your
expression for several values of β. Compare with what you get by evaluating the full
expression with a calculator.
b) Show that for large γ, 1 − β ≈ 1/(2γ 2 ). Use this expression to find the values of β when
γ = {2, 10, 103 }. Compare the approximate results with those obtained from the full
expression with a calculator.
∂2 1 ∂2
f (t, x) − f (t, x) = 0 (1)
∂x2 c2 ∂t2
1
Prof. David Hilditch Relatividade
Prof. Francisco Duque Week 2 2021/2022
is invariant under a Lorentz transformation to a reference frame moving with relative speed
v along the x-axis.
a) What is the lifetime of the particle in the lab frame, knowing its velocity is 0.960c?
b) What is the length of the path of the particle in the lab frame during its lifetime?
c) What would be the path of the particle if the lifetime of the particle was the same in the
lab frame and in the proper frame, as in classical physics?
a) Suppose Alice records the status of the clocks on the train when all her clocks read t = 0.
What does she observe? Draw what she sees.
b) Suppose Bob records the status of the clocks on the platform when all his clocks register
t0 = 0. What does he observe? Draw what he sees.