Difference between revisions of "Relativistic Frames of Reference"
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− | <center><math>c=\frac{\sqrt{(\Delta x)^2+(\Delta y)^2+(\Delta z)^2}{\Delta t}</math></center> | + | <center><math>c=\frac{\sqrt{(\Delta x)^2+(\Delta y)^2+(\Delta z)^2}}{\Delta t}</math></center> |
Revision as of 03:11, 3 June 2017
Relativistic Frames of Reference
From the Galilean description of motion for a frame of reference moving relative to another frame considered stationary we know that
Using Einstein's Theory of Relativity, we know that the speed of light is a constant, c, for all reference frames. In the unprimed frame, from the definition of speed:
where
Using the distance equation in a Cartesian coordinate system, the change in distance becomes