Q: Start from the 4 Lorentz equations giving the variables T, X, Y, and Z in terms of t, x, y and z, and solve these equations for t, x, y and z in terms of T, X, Y, and Z. Make sure the result is what you expected.
A: The problem will be solved for a boost transformation without any angular momentum (the case for y and z not equal to zero just gets messier, not deeper).
L q = q', so q = L^-1 q'. L's inverse always exists and is straight forward to calculate: the inverse is the transpose divided by the square of the norm.
(The inverse was big and ugly, that's why it was hidden from view, but it does work! The things that change are the sign of the second component and the normalization factor which is quite bulky).
Q: In frame S, a flash of light is emitted at the origin and is absorbed on the x axis at x = d. Answer the following questions from the point of view of frame S', moving in the standard way: (a) What is the spatial separation d' between the point of emission and the point of absorption of the light? (b) How much time elapses between the emission and the absorption?
A: (a) In frame S, the point of absorption is q[d, d, 0, 0]. Boost this to frame S', and look at the x component.
The separation is presuming frame S' is moving in the same direction as the light.
(b) The elapsed time is the first component of the transformed quaternion from above, or .
Q: (long) Manuel wants to demonstrate the Lorentz length contraction by
fitting his 10 m ladder inside his 8 m garage. He ties the ladder on top
of his station wagon and asks his friend Linda to drive the wagon into the
open door of the garage. Linda drives it at the speed of 0.8c, than therefore
gamma = 5/3, which makes the ladder only 6 m long. Manuel is standing by
the door and, as soon as the rear end of the ladder has passed, he shuts
the door. He now has the entire ladder inside the 8 m garage, just as he
said he would. However, this garage also has a back door and, since the
brakes on the wagon are a little worn out, Manuel has instructed his other
friend Gwen to open the back door at the precise instant that the front
end of the ladder is about to hit it. It's OK, says Manuel, because the
ladder was actually inside the garage, with both doors shut, for a finite
amount of time, and that is all he wanted to prove. But it turns out that
Gwen's cat, CloudNine, was sitting all the time on the ladder on top of
the wagon, and CloudNine disagrees totally. He says: the ladder was really
10 m, while the garage was Lorentz contracted and only 8 m x 3/5 = 4.8 m,
and obviously that the ladder was never, never totally inside the garage.
CloudNine looks in good health; the ladder is still in one piece. What's
going on? Who is right?
INSTRUCTIONS: Define 4 separate events. Choose coordinates in two frames.
Elaborate the 2 descriptions of what happened, Manuel's and CloudNine's,
giving precise numbers for all the events. Show that these two descriptions
are actually totally consistent, given the known laws of special relativity.
A. From the viewpoint of the barn, the ladder is contracted. This involves boosting the end of the ladder, and subtracting where the start of the ladder has moved to at a simultaneous time.
Manuel observes (correctly) that the ladder appears to be length contracted to 6 m in his reference frame.
Repeat this exercise for the cat frame looking at the length of the barn.
The barn is only 4.8m long from the cat's reference frame.
Manuel and the cat make correct statements about length contraction from their own reference frames.
What makes this problem confusing to discuss is that the doors of the barn and the ends of the ladder are spacelike separated, so the order of events in time can be reversed depending on the reference frame.
The reference event chosen for the following spacetime diagrams (created in the program Spacetime by Prof. Edwin F. Taylor) is Manuel meeting the start of the ladder. The end of the barn and the end of the ladder must be located on invariant hyperbolae 8 and 10 meters long respectively. Gwen must open the door somewhere on the barn's 8 meter hyperbola. Manuel's dream will only come true if the reference event and the two ends are not separated by Gwen's action. This is not the case as seen in the figure below:
Gwen always opens the far barn door before both ends of the ladder and barn are together with Manuel and the start of the ladder, averting disaster. The barn stays in one piece and we have had fun with moving objects with spacelike separations.
Q: An observer S sees a flash of red light 1200 m from his position and a flash of blue light 720 m closer to him and on the same straight line. He measures the time interval between the occurrences of the flashes to be 5 microseconds, the red flash occurring first. (a) What is the relative velocity v of a second observer S' who would record these flashes as occurring at the same place? (b) From the point of view of S', which flash occurs first? (c) What time between them would S' measure?
A: (a) Boost both red and blue lights by beta into frame S'.
Set the distances equal to each other (the second components of the boosted quaternions) and solve.
The second observer moves toward the first observer at a relative speed of 0.48c.
(b) Substitute the value for v/c into the boosted time for the events.
The red light happens first for observer S'.
(c) Calculate the difference between the first two components of the quaternions.
The time difference is 4.39 microseconds.
If a quaternion is normalized to its interval, it becomes:
If a quaternion is normalized to its interval and the first term which is gamma, the result is a quaternion characterizing the velocities:
This quaternion can be formed from any quaternion and boosted accordingly.
For this series of problems, we need a more general boost quaternion, one where y and z are not zero.
Define the function Lambda to do the general boost along x.
Q: A radioactive nucleus moves with a uniform velocity of 0.050c along the x axis of a reference frame S fixed with respect to the laboratory. It decays by emitting an electron whose speed, measured in a reference frame S' moving with the nucleus, is 0.80c. Consider first the case in which the emitted electron travels (a) along the common x-x' axis and (b) along the y' axis and find, for each case, its velocity as measured in frame S. (c) Suppose, however, that the emitted electron, viewed now from frame S, travels along the y axis of that frame with a speed of 0.80c. What is its velocity as measured in frame S'?
A: (a) Boost the velocity quaternion by -0.05c, and keep it as a velocity quaternion by normalizing it with the resulting gamma.
The relative velocity in frame S is 0.817c along the x axis.
(b) Do that again, with y = 0.8.
The magnitude and angle of the velocity vector can be calculated.
The velocity vector is 0.8005c 3.58° to the right of the y axis.
(c) Repeat the calculation, switching the sign of the boost.
A similar quaternion to b, so the velocity vector is 0.80056c, but 3.57° to the left of the y axis.
Q: (a) Frame S' moves with respect to frame S with velocity beta1 in the +x direction. Frame S'' moves with respect to frame S' with velocity beta2 also in the + x direction. Frame S" moves with respect to frame S with velocity Beta, also in the +x direction. Let gamma1, gamma2, and Gamma be the 3 Lorentz factors corresponding to these 3 velocities, respectively. Prove the formula
(b) 2 identical particles are having a head-on collision. In their center-of-mass frame, each has a Lorentz factor gamma. Assume gamma >> 1. Now look at them in the Lab frame in which one of them is at rest, and call Gamma the Lorentz factor of the projectile particle. Show that Gamma is approximately equal to .
A: (a) From the reference frame of S', beta1 is towards it (so is negative) and beta2 is away from S' (so it is positive).
The first term is the gamma being sought. Note that the second term divided by the first term gives the expected addition of relative velocities for frame S'. The sign is opposite for frame S.
(b) If gamma >> 1, use the approximation for beta of one minus epsilon, where epsilon is a small number. Plug into the results from part (a).
Square gamma.
Substitute back into Gamma big.
Gamma for the projectile particle is the first term of the above quaternion, approximately .
Q: An inertial system S1 has a constant velocity v1 along the x axis relative
to an inertial system S. Inertial system S2 has a velocity v2 relative to
S1. Two successive Lorentz transformations enable up to go from (t, x, y,
z) to (t1, x1, y1, z1) and then from (t1, x1, y1, z1) to (t2, x2, y2, z2).
Show that this gives the same result as a single Lorentz transformation
from (t, x, y, z) to (t2, x2, y2, z2) provided we take the velocity of S1
relative to S as
.
A: Boost once, then again.
Now boost once using the addition of velocities rule.
These two quaternions are identical, as expected.
There are a few tools required to solve problems in special relativity using quaternions to characterize events in spacetime. The most basic are a round value for c and gamma.
Define a function for quaternions using its matrix representation.
A quaternion L that transforms a quaternion (L q[x] = q[x'])
identical to how the Lorentz transformation acts on 4-vectors
(Lambda x = x') should exist. These are described in detail
in the notebook "A different algebra for boosts." For boosts along
the x axis with y = z = 0, the general function for L is
Most of the problems here involve much simpler cases for L, where t or x is zero, or t is equal to x.
If t = 0, then
If x = 0, then
If t = x, then
Note: this is for redshifts. Blueshifts have a plus instead of the minus.
The problems are from "Basic Concepts in Relativity" by Resnick and Halliday, ©1992 by Macmillian Publishing, "Special Relativity" by A. P. French, © 1966, 1968 by MIT, and Prof. M. Baranger of MIT.