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Den 12.03.2024 20:42, skrev Richard Hachel:It's sort of so that accelerating has a "first start"Le 12/03/2024 à 20:19, "Paul B. Andersen" a écrit :>Den 12.03.2024 10:00, skrev Richard Hachel:>We know that in accelerated frames of reference the average speed is>
proportional to the instantaneous speed.
>
Let Vrm=(1/2)Vri
This is meaningless without definition of the entities.
>
But I can guess:
You are not talking about "speed in an accelerated frame".
>
You are talking about the speed of a stationary object
in an accelerated frame, measured in an inertial frame.
>
If the object is instantly at rest at t = 0, and
the coordinate acceleration in the inertial frame is constant a,
Then the speed Vri(t) = at
and the average speed from t=0 to t=t is Vrm(t) = at/2.
>
So Vrm=(1/2)Vri
That is what I am saying.
Yes. And I agree.
>
NOTE THIS:
If the object is instantly at rest at t = 0, and
the coordinate acceleration in the inertial frame is constant a,
Then the speed Vri(t) = at
>>>
Vr=a.Tr
Where Vr (Vri(t)) is the speed in the inertial frame,
and Tr (t) is the time coordinate in the inertial frame, and
----------------------------------------------------------------
a is the constant coordinate acceleration in the inertial frame!
================================================================
>
The consequence of this is that when t > c/a v > c
which is impossible in SR.
>
That means that the coordinate acceleration a can't be constant!
==============================================================
>
>>>
According to SR:
>
For the above to be true, the coordinate acceleration must
be constant. This means that the proper acceleration must
increase with time.
>
Let 1g = 1 c per year = 9.4998 m/s².
>
>
when t ≥ 1.0 year the coordinate acceleration can't
be kept equal to 1 g.
>
Generally:
The coordinate acceleration a can't be kept equal to n g
when t ≥ 1/n year.
>
>
It is obviously normal to keep the proper acceleration constant,
and then Vrm ≠ (1/2)Vri
As you said yourself:
"I beg you to understand something:
in the rocket's frame of reference, the acceleration is constant."
>
That is the proper acceleration A is constant, and then
the coordinate acceleration a is NOT constant, it is
decreasing with time, Vri < at and Vrm > (1/2)Vri.
>
Se exact calculation below.
>>>
I don't understand what you are saying.
>
I think that between you and me, there is a different understanding of
things.
Indeed!
>
Understand this:
What SR predicts is not a matter of opinion,
it is a matter of fact.
>
https://paulba.no/pdf/TwinsByMetric.pdf
see equation (38)
>
It is a FACT that according to SR, the speed of
an object with constant proper acceleration A is:
>
Vri(t) = A⋅t/√(1+(A⋅t/c)²)
>
Note that:
Vri → A⋅t when t → 0
Vri → c when t → ∞
>
The average speed Vrm at the time t is:
Vrm = (integral from t=0 to t=t of Vri(t)dt)/t
Vrm = c²⋅(√(1+(A⋅t/c)²)-1)/A⋅t
>
Note that:
Vrm → A⋅t/2 when t → 0
Vrm → c when t → ∞
>
So:
Vrm/Vri → 1/2 when t → 0
Vrm/Vri → 1 when t → ∞
>
So for any t > 0 Vrm > (1/2)Vri
>
It is not possible to make SR predict anything else!
====================================================
>
The coordinate acceleration a is:
a = dVri/dt = A/(√(1+(A⋅t/c)²))³
where A is the proper acceleration
>
Note that:
a → A when t → 0
a → 0 when t → ∞
>
>>>
But we know that relativistic physicists do not use this notion, and
it is important to remind them of the relationship between real
speed and observable speed.
>
Vr=Vo/sqrt(1-Vo²/c²)>>
This is nonsense.
According to "relativistic physicists" there is no difference
between the "real speed" and the "observable (measurable) speed"
in the inertial frame.>>
That is what I am saying.
Physicists do not differentiate between Vo and Vr.
Because there is no such difference.
>
You are claiming that when you measure the speed of a passing object,
then you will always measure the real speed divided by γ.
>
Can you please explain how you arrived at this conclusion?
Show the maths, please.
>It is really a shame that a large majority of physicists are not very>
intelligent, they understand nothing of what they are saying,
which is dramatic since their number serves as truth.
:-D
>
The "large majority of physicists" are obviously much more
intelligent than average. They have to be to pass the exams.
(I am not a physicist.)
>A bit like in Nazi Germany everyone believed they were right because>
everyone held out their arm in front of Hitler.
Physicists are educated, but very few are intelligent.
A hysterical reaction!
>>>
On usenet, there are perhaps five or six people with whom we can
seriously discuss relativity, without immediately falling into
hysterical reactions. (Julien Arlandis, Michel Talon, Paul B
Anderson...). The others not only learned anything, but answer
nonsense when asked a simple problem.
>
Above you have demonstrated that you belong to the group that
falls into hysterical reactions.
>
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.