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Proper velocity

In relativity, proper velocity (also known as celerity) w of an object relative to an observer is the ratio between observer-measured displacement vector and proper time τ elapsed on the clocks of the traveling object:

Log-log plot of γ (blue), v/c (cyan), and η (yellow) versus proper velocity w/c (i.e. momentum p/mc). Note that w/c is tracked by v/c at low speeds and by γ at high speeds. The dashed red curve is γ − 1 (kinetic energy K/mc2), while the dashed magenta curve is the relativistic Doppler factor.

It is an alternative to ordinary velocity, the distance per unit time where both distance and time are measured by the observer.

The two types of velocity, ordinary and proper, are very nearly equal at low speeds. However, at high speeds proper velocity retains many of the properties that velocity loses in relativity compared with Newtonian theory. For example, proper velocity equals momentum per unit mass at any speed, and therefore has no upper limit. At high speeds, as shown in the figure at right, it is proportional to an object's energy as well.

Proper velocity w can be related to the ordinary velocity v via the Lorentz factor γ:

where t is coordinate time or "map time". For unidirectional motion, each of these is also simply related to a traveling object's hyperbolic velocity angle or rapidity η by

.

Introduction edit

In flat spacetime, proper velocity is the ratio between distance traveled relative to a reference map frame (used to define simultaneity) and proper time τ elapsed on the clocks of the traveling object. It equals the object's momentum p divided by its rest mass m, and is made up of the space-like components of the object's four-vector velocity. William Shurcliff's monograph[1] mentioned its early use in the Sears and Brehme text.[2] Fraundorf has explored its pedagogical value[3] while Ungar,[4] Baylis[5] and Hestenes[6] have examined its relevance from group theory and geometric algebra perspectives. Proper velocity is sometimes referred to as celerity.[7]

 
A cruiser drops out of hyperspace...

Unlike the more familiar coordinate velocity v, proper velocity is synchrony-free[1] (does not require synchronized clocks) and is useful for describing both super-relativistic and sub-relativistic motion. Like coordinate velocity and unlike four-vector velocity, it resides in the three-dimensional slice of spacetime defined by the map frame. As shown below and in the example figure at right, proper-velocities even add as three vectors with rescaling of the out-of-frame component. This makes them more useful for map-based (e.g. engineering) applications, and less useful for gaining coordinate-free insight. Proper speed divided by lightspeed c is the hyperbolic sine of rapidity η, just as the Lorentz factor γ is rapidity's hyperbolic cosine, and coordinate speed v over lightspeed is rapidity's hyperbolic tangent.

Imagine an object traveling through a region of spacetime locally described by Hermann Minkowski's flat-space metric equation (cdτ)2 = (cdt)2 − (dx)2. Here a reference map frame of yardsticks and synchronized clocks define map position x and map time t respectively, and the d preceding a coordinate means infinitesimal change. A bit of manipulation allows one to show that proper velocity w = dx/dτ = γv where as usual coordinate velocity v = dx/dt. Thus finite w ensures that v is less than lightspeed c. By grouping γ with v in the expression for relativistic momentum p, proper velocity also extends the Newtonian form of momentum as mass times velocity to high speeds without a need for relativistic mass.[8]

Proper velocity addition formula edit

The proper velocity addition formula:[9][10][4]

 

where   is the beta factor given by  .

This formula provides a proper velocity gyrovector space model of hyperbolic geometry that uses a whole space compared to other models of hyperbolic geometry which use discs or half-planes.

In the unidirectional case this becomes commutative and simplifies to a Lorentz factor product times a coordinate velocity sum, e.g. to wAC = γABγBC(vAB + vBC), as discussed in the application section below.

Relation to other velocity parameters edit

Speed table edit

The table below illustrates how the proper velocity of w = c or "one map-lightyear per traveler-year" is a natural benchmark for the transition from sub-relativistic to super-relativistic motion.

Comparison of benchmark values, several near the relativistic slope-change in KE vs. momentum.
Condition/Parameter Coordinate velocity v
dx/dt in units of c
Velocity angle η
in i-radians
Proper velocity w
dx/ in units of c
Lorentz factor γ
dt/ = E/mc2
Traveler stopped in map-frame ⇔
1 map-year/traveler-year
0 0 0 1
Momentum = ½mc
0.5 map-lightyear/traveler-year
1/5 ≅ 0.447 ln[(1 + 5)/2] ≅ 0.481 ½ 5/2 ≅ 1.118
Rapidity of 0.5 hyperbolic radian (e − 1)/(e + 1) ≅ 0.462 ½ ½(e − 1/e) ≅ 0.521 ½(e + 1/e) ≅ 1.128
Coordinate velocity = ½c
0.5 map-lightyear/map-year
½ ½ln[3] ≅ 0.549 1/3 ≅ 0.577 2/3 ≅ 1.155
Momentum = mc ⇔
1 map-lightyear/traveler-year
1/2 ≅ 0.707 ln[1 + 2] ≅ 0.881 1 2 ≅ 1.414
Rapidity of 1 hyperbolic radian (e2 − 1)/(e2 + 1) ≅ 0.761 1 ½(e − 1/e) ≅ 1.175 ½(e + 1/e) ≅ 1.543
Kinetic energy = mc2
2 map-years/traveler-year
3/2 ≅ 0.866 ln[3 + 2] ≅ 1.317 3 ≅ 1.732 2
Momentum = 2mc ⇔
2 map-lightyears/traveler-year
2/5 ≅ 0.894 ln[2 + 5] ≅ 1.444 2 5 ≅ 2.236
Rapidity of 2 hyperbolic radians (e4−1)/(e4+1) ≅ 0.964 2 ½(e2 − 1/e2) ≅ 3.627 ½(e2 + 1/e2) ≅ 3.762
Coordinate velocity = c ⇔
1 map-lightyear/map-year
1

Note from above that velocity angle η and proper-velocity w run from 0 to infinity and track coordinate-velocity when w << c. On the other hand, when w >> c, proper velocity tracks Lorentz factor while velocity angle is logarithmic and hence increases much more slowly.

Interconversion equations edit

The following equations convert between four alternate measures of speed (or unidirectional velocity) that flow from Minkowski's flat-space metric equation:

 .

Lorentz factor γ: energy over mc2 ≥ 1 edit

 

Proper velocity w: momentum per unit mass edit

 

Coordinate velocity: v ≤ c edit

 

Hyperbolic velocity angle or rapidity edit

 

or in terms of logarithms:

 .

Applications edit

Comparing velocities at high speed edit

 
Unidirectional velocity addition: The proper sum curves up.

Proper velocity is useful for comparing the speed of objects with momentum per unit rest mass (w) greater than lightspeed c. The coordinate speed of such objects is generally near lightspeed, whereas proper velocity indicates how rapidly they are covering ground on traveling-object clocks. This is important for example if, like some cosmic ray particles, the traveling objects have a finite lifetime. Proper velocity also clues us in to the object's momentum, which has no upper bound.

For example, a 45 GeV electron accelerated by the Large Electron–Positron Collider (LEP) at Cern in 1989 would have had a Lorentz factor γ of about 88,000 (45 GeV divided by the electron rest mass of 511 keV). Its coordinate speed v would have been about sixty four trillionths shy of lightspeed c at 1 lightsecond per map second. On the other hand, its proper speed would have been w = γv ~ 88,000 lightseconds per traveler second. By comparison the coordinate speed of a 250 GeV electron in the proposed International Linear Collider[11] (ILC) will remain near c, while its proper speed will significantly increase to ~489,000 lightseconds per traveler second.

Proper velocity is also useful for comparing relative velocities along a line at high speed. In this case

 

where A, B and C refer to different objects or frames of reference.[12] For example, wAC refers to the proper speed of object A with respect to object C. Thus in calculating the relative proper speed, Lorentz factors multiply when coordinate speeds add.

Hence each of two electrons (A and C) in a head-on collision at 45 GeV in the lab frame (B) would see the other coming toward them at vAC ~ c and wAC = 88,0002(1 + 1) ~ 1.55×1010 lightseconds per traveler second. Thus from the target's point of view, colliders can explore collisions with much higher projectile energy and momentum per unit mass.

Proper velocity-based dispersion relations edit

 
Plots of (γ − 1)c2 × mass, versus proper velocity × mass, for a range of mass values along both axes.

Plotting "(γ − 1) versus proper velocity" after multiplying the former by mc2 and the latter by mass m, for various values of m yields a family of kinetic energy versus momentum curves that includes most of the moving objects encountered in everyday life. Such plots can for example be used to show where lightspeed, Planck's constant, and Boltzmann energy kT figure in.

To illustrate, the figure at right with log-log axes shows objects with the same kinetic energy (horizontally related) that carry different amounts of momentum, as well as how the speed of a low-mass object compares (by vertical extrapolation) to the speed after perfectly inelastic collision with a large object at rest. Highly sloped lines (rise/run = 2) mark contours of constant mass, while lines of unit slope mark contours of constant speed.

Objects that fit nicely on this plot are humans driving cars, dust particles in Brownian motion, a spaceship in orbit around the Sun, molecules at room temperature, a fighter jet at Mach 3, one radio wave photon, a person moving at one lightyear per traveler year, the pulse of a 1.8 MegaJoule laser, a 250 GeV electron, and our observable universe with the blackbody kinetic energy expected of a single particle at 3 kelvin.

Unidirectional acceleration via proper velocity edit

Proper acceleration at any speed is the physical acceleration experienced locally by an object. In spacetime it is a three-vector acceleration with respect to the object's instantaneously varying free-float frame.[13] Its magnitude α is the frame-invariant magnitude of that object's four-acceleration. Proper acceleration is also useful from the vantage point (or spacetime slice) of external observers. Not only may observers in all frames agree on its magnitude, but it also measures the extent to which an accelerating rocket "has its pedal to the metal".

In the unidirectional case i.e. when the object's acceleration is parallel or anti-parallel to its velocity in the spacetime slice of the observer, the change in proper velocity is the integral of proper acceleration over map time i.e. Δw = αΔt for constant α. At low speeds this reduces to the well-known relation between coordinate velocity and coordinate acceleration times map time, i.e. Δv = aΔt. For constant unidirectional proper acceleration, similar relationships exist between rapidity η and elapsed proper time Δτ, as well as between Lorentz factor γ and distance traveled Δx. To be specific:

 ,

where as noted above the various velocity parameters are related by

 .

These equations describe some consequences of accelerated travel at high speed. For example, imagine a spaceship that can accelerate its passengers at 1 g (or 1.03 lightyears/year2) halfway to their destination, and then decelerate them at 1 g for the remaining half so as to provide Earth-like artificial gravity from point A to point B over the shortest possible time. For a map distance of ΔxAB, the first equation above predicts a midpoint Lorentz factor (up from its unit rest value) of γmid=1+α(ΔxAB/2)/c2. Hence the round-trip time on traveler clocks will be Δτ = 4(c/α)cosh−1mid], during which the time elapsed on map clocks will be Δt = 4(c/α)sinh[cosh−1mid]].

 
Plot of velocity parameters and times on the horizontal axis, versus position on the vertical axis, for an accelerated twin roundtrip to a destination with ΔxAB=10c2/α ~10 lightyears away if α~9.8 m/s2.

This imagined spaceship could offer round trips to Proxima Centauri lasting about 7.1 traveler years (~12 years on Earth clocks), round trips to the Milky Way's central black hole of about 40 years (~54,000 years elapsed on Earth clocks), and round trips to Andromeda Galaxy lasting around 57 years (over 5 million years on Earth clocks). Unfortunately, while rocket accelerations of 1 g can easily be achieved, they cannot be sustained over long periods of time.[14]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ a b William Shurcliff (1996) Special relativity: the central ideas (19 Appleton St, Cambridge MA 02138)
  2. ^ Francis W. Sears & Robert W. Brehme (1968) Introduction to the theory of relativity (Addison-Wesley, NY) LCCN 680019344, section 7–3
  3. ^ Fraundorf, P. (1996). "A one-map two-clock approach to teaching relativity in introductory physics". arXiv:physics/9611011.
  4. ^ a b Ungar, Abraham A. (2006). "The Relativistic Proper-Velocity Transformation Group". Progress in Electromagnetics Research. 60: 85–94. doi:10.2528/PIER05121501.
  5. ^ W. E. Baylis (1996) Clifford (geometric) algebras with applications to physics (Springer, NY) ISBN 0-8176-3868-7
  6. ^ D. Hestenes (2003) "Spacetime physics with geometric algebra", Am. J. Phys. 71, 691–714
  7. ^ Bernard Jancewicz (1988) Multivectors and Clifford algebra in electrodynamics (World Scientific, NY) ISBN 9971-5-0290-9
  8. ^ Oas, Gary (2005). "On the Use of Relativistic Mass in Various Published Works". arXiv:physics/0504111.
  9. ^ Ungar, Abraham A. (1997). "Thomas precession: Its underlying gyrogroup axioms and their use in hyperbolic geometry and relativistic physics". Foundations of Physics. 27 (6): 881–951. Bibcode:1997FoPh...27..881U. doi:10.1007/BF02550347. S2CID 122320811.
  10. ^ Analytic hyperbolic geometry and Albert Einstein's special theory of relativity, Abraham A. Ungar, World Scientific, 2008, ISBN 978-981-277-229-9
  11. ^ B. Barish, N. Walker and H. Yamamoto, "Building the next generation collider" Scientific American (Feb 2008) 54–59
  12. ^ This velocity-addition rule is easily derived from rapidities α and β, since sinh(α + β) = cosh α cosh β (tanh α + tanh β).
  13. ^ Edwin F. Taylor & John Archibald Wheeler (1966 1st ed. only) Spacetime Physics (W.H. Freeman, San Francisco) ISBN 0-7167-0336-X, Chapter 1 Exercise 51 page 97–98: "Clock paradox III"
  14. ^ Calle, Carlos I. (2009). Superstrings and Other Things: A Guide to Physics (2nd revised ed.). CRC Press. p. 365. ISBN 978-1-4398-1074-3. Extract of page 365

External links edit

  • Spacetime Physics by Edwin F. Taylor and John Archibald Wheeler

proper, velocity, confused, with, proper, motion, relativity, proper, velocity, also, known, celerity, object, relative, observer, ratio, between, observer, measured, displacement, vector, displaystyle, textbf, proper, time, elapsed, clocks, traveling, object,. Not to be confused with proper motion In relativity proper velocity also known as celerity w of an object relative to an observer is the ratio between observer measured displacement vector x displaystyle textbf x and proper time t elapsed on the clocks of the traveling object Log log plot of g blue v c cyan and h yellow versus proper velocity w c i e momentum p mc Note that w c is tracked by v c at low speeds and by g at high speeds The dashed red curve is g 1 kinetic energy K mc2 while the dashed magenta curve is the relativistic Doppler factor w d x d t displaystyle textbf w frac d textbf x d tau It is an alternative to ordinary velocity the distance per unit time where both distance and time are measured by the observer The two types of velocity ordinary and proper are very nearly equal at low speeds However at high speeds proper velocity retains many of the properties that velocity loses in relativity compared with Newtonian theory For example proper velocity equals momentum per unit mass at any speed and therefore has no upper limit At high speeds as shown in the figure at right it is proportional to an object s energy as well Proper velocity w can be related to the ordinary velocity v via the Lorentz factor g w d x d t d t d t v g v displaystyle textbf w frac d textbf x dt frac dt d tau textbf v gamma v where t is coordinate time or map time For unidirectional motion each of these is also simply related to a traveling object s hyperbolic velocity angle or rapidity h by h sinh 1 w c tanh 1 v c cosh 1 g displaystyle eta sinh 1 frac w c tanh 1 frac v c pm cosh 1 gamma Contents 1 Introduction 2 Proper velocity addition formula 3 Relation to other velocity parameters 3 1 Speed table 3 2 Interconversion equations 3 2 1 Lorentz factor g energy over mc2 1 3 2 2 Proper velocity w momentum per unit mass 3 2 3 Coordinate velocity v c 3 2 4 Hyperbolic velocity angle or rapidity 4 Applications 4 1 Comparing velocities at high speed 4 2 Proper velocity based dispersion relations 4 3 Unidirectional acceleration via proper velocity 5 See also 6 Notes and references 7 External linksIntroduction editIn flat spacetime proper velocity is the ratio between distance traveled relative to a reference map frame used to define simultaneity and proper time t elapsed on the clocks of the traveling object It equals the object s momentum p divided by its rest mass m and is made up of the space like components of the object s four vector velocity William Shurcliff s monograph 1 mentioned its early use in the Sears and Brehme text 2 Fraundorf has explored its pedagogical value 3 while Ungar 4 Baylis 5 and Hestenes 6 have examined its relevance from group theory and geometric algebra perspectives Proper velocity is sometimes referred to as celerity 7 nbsp A cruiser drops out of hyperspace Unlike the more familiar coordinate velocity v proper velocity is synchrony free 1 does not require synchronized clocks and is useful for describing both super relativistic and sub relativistic motion Like coordinate velocity and unlike four vector velocity it resides in the three dimensional slice of spacetime defined by the map frame As shown below and in the example figure at right proper velocities even add as three vectors with rescaling of the out of frame component This makes them more useful for map based e g engineering applications and less useful for gaining coordinate free insight Proper speed divided by lightspeed c is the hyperbolic sine of rapidity h just as the Lorentz factor g is rapidity s hyperbolic cosine and coordinate speed v over lightspeed is rapidity s hyperbolic tangent Imagine an object traveling through a region of spacetime locally described by Hermann Minkowski s flat space metric equation cdt 2 cdt 2 dx 2 Here a reference map frame of yardsticks and synchronized clocks define map position x and map time t respectively and the d preceding a coordinate means infinitesimal change A bit of manipulation allows one to show that proper velocity w dx dt gv where as usual coordinate velocity v dx dt Thus finite w ensures that v is less than lightspeed c By grouping g with v in the expression for relativistic momentum p proper velocity also extends the Newtonian form of momentum as mass times velocity to high speeds without a need for relativistic mass 8 Proper velocity addition formula editThe proper velocity addition formula 9 10 4 u v u v b u 1 b u u v c 2 1 b v b v u displaystyle mathbf u oplus mathbf v mathbf u mathbf v left frac beta mathbf u 1 beta mathbf u frac mathbf u cdot mathbf v c 2 frac 1 beta mathbf v beta mathbf v right mathbf u nbsp where b w displaystyle beta mathbf w nbsp is the beta factor given by b w 1 1 w 2 c 2 displaystyle beta mathbf w frac 1 sqrt 1 frac mathbf w 2 c 2 nbsp This formula provides a proper velocity gyrovector space model of hyperbolic geometry that uses a whole space compared to other models of hyperbolic geometry which use discs or half planes In the unidirectional case this becomes commutative and simplifies to a Lorentz factor product times a coordinate velocity sum e g to wAC gABgBC vAB vBC as discussed in the application section below Relation to other velocity parameters editSpeed table edit The table below illustrates how the proper velocity of w c or one map lightyear per traveler year is a natural benchmark for the transition from sub relativistic to super relativistic motion Comparison of benchmark values several near the relativistic slope change in KE vs momentum Condition Parameter Coordinate velocity vdx dt in units of c Velocity angle h in i radians Proper velocity wdx dt in units of c Lorentz factor gdt dt E mc2 Traveler stopped in map frame 1 map year traveler year 0 0 0 1 Momentum mc 0 5 map lightyear traveler year 1 5 0 447 ln 1 5 2 0 481 5 2 1 118 Rapidity of 0 5 hyperbolic radian e 1 e 1 0 462 e 1 e 0 521 e 1 e 1 128 Coordinate velocity c 0 5 map lightyear map year ln 3 0 549 1 3 0 577 2 3 1 155 Momentum mc 1 map lightyear traveler year 1 2 0 707 ln 1 2 0 881 1 2 1 414 Rapidity of 1 hyperbolic radian e2 1 e2 1 0 761 1 e 1 e 1 175 e 1 e 1 543 Kinetic energy mc2 2 map years traveler year 3 2 0 866 ln 3 2 1 317 3 1 732 2 Momentum 2mc 2 map lightyears traveler year 2 5 0 894 ln 2 5 1 444 2 5 2 236 Rapidity of 2 hyperbolic radians e4 1 e4 1 0 964 2 e2 1 e2 3 627 e2 1 e2 3 762 Coordinate velocity c 1 map lightyear map year 1 Note from above that velocity angle h and proper velocity w run from 0 to infinity and track coordinate velocity when w lt lt c On the other hand when w gt gt c proper velocity tracks Lorentz factor while velocity angle is logarithmic and hence increases much more slowly Interconversion equations edit The following equations convert between four alternate measures of speed or unidirectional velocity that flow from Minkowski s flat space metric equation c d t 2 c d t 2 d x 2 displaystyle c delta tau 2 c delta t 2 delta x 2 nbsp Lorentz factor g energy over mc2 1 edit g d t d t 1 w c 2 1 1 v c 2 cosh h e h e h 2 displaystyle gamma equiv frac dt d tau sqrt 1 left frac w c right 2 frac 1 sqrt 1 frac v c 2 cosh eta equiv frac e eta e eta 2 nbsp Proper velocity w momentum per unit mass edit w c 1 c d x d t v c 1 1 v c 2 sinh h e h e h 2 g 2 1 displaystyle frac w c equiv frac 1 c frac dx d tau frac v c frac 1 sqrt 1 frac v c 2 sinh eta equiv frac e eta e eta 2 pm sqrt gamma 2 1 nbsp Coordinate velocity v c edit v c 1 c d x d t w c 1 1 w c 2 tanh h e 2 h 1 e 2 h 1 1 1 g 2 displaystyle frac v c equiv frac 1 c frac dx dt frac w c frac 1 sqrt 1 frac w c 2 tanh eta equiv frac e 2 eta 1 e 2 eta 1 pm sqrt 1 left frac 1 gamma right 2 nbsp Hyperbolic velocity angle or rapidity edit h sinh 1 w c tanh 1 v c cosh 1 g displaystyle eta sinh 1 left frac w c right tanh 1 left frac v c right pm cosh 1 left gamma right nbsp or in terms of logarithms h ln w c w c 2 1 1 2 ln 1 v c 1 v c ln g g 2 1 displaystyle eta ln left frac w c sqrt left frac w c right 2 1 right frac 1 2 ln left frac 1 frac v c 1 frac v c right pm ln left gamma sqrt gamma 2 1 right nbsp Applications editComparing velocities at high speed edit nbsp Unidirectional velocity addition The proper sum curves up Proper velocity is useful for comparing the speed of objects with momentum per unit rest mass w greater than lightspeed c The coordinate speed of such objects is generally near lightspeed whereas proper velocity indicates how rapidly they are covering ground on traveling object clocks This is important for example if like some cosmic ray particles the traveling objects have a finite lifetime Proper velocity also clues us in to the object s momentum which has no upper bound For example a 45 GeV electron accelerated by the Large Electron Positron Collider LEP at Cern in 1989 would have had a Lorentz factor g of about 88 000 45 GeV divided by the electron rest mass of 511 keV Its coordinate speed v would have been about sixty four trillionths shy of lightspeed c at 1 lightsecond per map second On the other hand its proper speed would have been w gv 88 000 lightseconds per traveler second By comparison the coordinate speed of a 250 GeV electron in the proposed International Linear Collider 11 ILC will remain near c while its proper speed will significantly increase to 489 000 lightseconds per traveler second Proper velocity is also useful for comparing relative velocities along a line at high speed In this case p A C m 1 w A C g A C v A C g A B g B C v A B v B C g A B w B C w A B g B C displaystyle frac p AC m 1 w AC gamma AC v AC gamma AB gamma BC left v AB v BC right gamma AB w BC w AB gamma BC nbsp where A B and C refer to different objects or frames of reference 12 For example wAC refers to the proper speed of object A with respect to object C Thus in calculating the relative proper speed Lorentz factors multiply when coordinate speeds add Hence each of two electrons A and C in a head on collision at 45 GeV in the lab frame B would see the other coming toward them at vAC c and wAC 88 0002 1 1 1 55 1010 lightseconds per traveler second Thus from the target s point of view colliders can explore collisions with much higher projectile energy and momentum per unit mass Proper velocity based dispersion relations edit nbsp Plots of g 1 c2 mass versus proper velocity mass for a range of mass values along both axes Plotting g 1 versus proper velocity after multiplying the former by mc2 and the latter by mass m for various values of m yields a family of kinetic energy versus momentum curves that includes most of the moving objects encountered in everyday life Such plots can for example be used to show where lightspeed Planck s constant and Boltzmann energy kT figure in To illustrate the figure at right with log log axes shows objects with the same kinetic energy horizontally related that carry different amounts of momentum as well as how the speed of a low mass object compares by vertical extrapolation to the speed after perfectly inelastic collision with a large object at rest Highly sloped lines rise run 2 mark contours of constant mass while lines of unit slope mark contours of constant speed Objects that fit nicely on this plot are humans driving cars dust particles in Brownian motion a spaceship in orbit around the Sun molecules at room temperature a fighter jet at Mach 3 one radio wave photon a person moving at one lightyear per traveler year the pulse of a 1 8 MegaJoule laser a 250 GeV electron and our observable universe with the blackbody kinetic energy expected of a single particle at 3 kelvin Unidirectional acceleration via proper velocity edit Proper acceleration at any speed is the physical acceleration experienced locally by an object In spacetime it is a three vector acceleration with respect to the object s instantaneously varying free float frame 13 Its magnitude a is the frame invariant magnitude of that object s four acceleration Proper acceleration is also useful from the vantage point or spacetime slice of external observers Not only may observers in all frames agree on its magnitude but it also measures the extent to which an accelerating rocket has its pedal to the metal In the unidirectional case i e when the object s acceleration is parallel or anti parallel to its velocity in the spacetime slice of the observer the change in proper velocity is the integral of proper acceleration over map time i e Dw aDt for constant a At low speeds this reduces to the well known relation between coordinate velocity and coordinate acceleration times map time i e Dv aDt For constant unidirectional proper acceleration similar relationships exist between rapidity h and elapsed proper time Dt as well as between Lorentz factor g and distance traveled Dx To be specific a D w D t c D h D t c 2 D g D x displaystyle alpha frac Delta w Delta t c frac Delta eta Delta tau c 2 frac Delta gamma Delta x nbsp where as noted above the various velocity parameters are related by h sinh 1 w c tanh 1 v c cosh 1 g displaystyle eta sinh 1 left frac w c right tanh 1 left frac v c right pm cosh 1 left gamma right nbsp These equations describe some consequences of accelerated travel at high speed For example imagine a spaceship that can accelerate its passengers at 1 g or 1 03 lightyears year2 halfway to their destination and then decelerate them at 1 g for the remaining half so as to provide Earth like artificial gravity from point A to point B over the shortest possible time For a map distance of DxAB the first equation above predicts a midpoint Lorentz factor up from its unit rest value of gmid 1 a DxAB 2 c2 Hence the round trip time on traveler clocks will be Dt 4 c a cosh 1 gmid during which the time elapsed on map clocks will be Dt 4 c a sinh cosh 1 gmid nbsp Plot of velocity parameters and times on the horizontal axis versus position on the vertical axis for an accelerated twin roundtrip to a destination with DxAB 10c2 a 10 lightyears away if a 9 8 m s2 This imagined spaceship could offer round trips to Proxima Centauri lasting about 7 1 traveler years 12 years on Earth clocks round trips to the Milky Way s central black hole of about 40 years 54 000 years elapsed on Earth clocks and round trips to Andromeda Galaxy lasting around 57 years over 5 million years on Earth clocks Unfortunately while rocket accelerations of 1 g can easily be achieved they cannot be sustained over long periods of time 14 See also editKinematics for studying ways that position changes with time Lorentz factor g dt dt or kinetic energy over mc2 Rapidity hyperbolic velocity angle in imaginary radians Four velocity combining travel through time and space Uniform acceleration holding coordinate acceleration fixed Gullstrand Painleve coordinates free float frames in curved spacetime Notes and references edit a b William Shurcliff 1996 Special relativity the central ideas 19 Appleton St Cambridge MA 02138 Francis W Sears amp Robert W Brehme 1968 Introduction to the theory of relativity Addison Wesley NY LCCN 680019344 section 7 3 Fraundorf P 1996 A one map two clock approach to teaching relativity in introductory physics arXiv physics 9611011 a b Ungar Abraham A 2006 The Relativistic Proper Velocity Transformation Group Progress in Electromagnetics Research 60 85 94 doi 10 2528 PIER05121501 W E Baylis 1996 Clifford geometric algebras with applications to physics Springer NY ISBN 0 8176 3868 7 D Hestenes 2003 Spacetime physics with geometric algebra Am J Phys 71 691 714 Bernard Jancewicz 1988 Multivectors and Clifford algebra in electrodynamics World Scientific NY ISBN 9971 5 0290 9 Oas Gary 2005 On the Use of Relativistic Mass in Various Published Works arXiv physics 0504111 Ungar Abraham A 1997 Thomas precession Its underlying gyrogroup axioms and their use in hyperbolic geometry and relativistic physics Foundations of Physics 27 6 881 951 Bibcode 1997FoPh 27 881U doi 10 1007 BF02550347 S2CID 122320811 Analytic hyperbolic geometry and Albert Einstein s special theory of relativity Abraham A Ungar World Scientific 2008 ISBN 978 981 277 229 9 B Barish N Walker and H Yamamoto Building the next generation collider Scientific American Feb 2008 54 59 This velocity addition rule is easily derived from rapidities a and b since sinh a b cosh a cosh b tanh a tanh b Edwin F Taylor amp John Archibald Wheeler 1966 1st ed only Spacetime Physics W H Freeman San Francisco ISBN 0 7167 0336 X Chapter 1 Exercise 51 page 97 98 Clock paradox III Calle Carlos I 2009 Superstrings and Other Things A Guide to Physics 2nd revised ed CRC Press p 365 ISBN 978 1 4398 1074 3 Extract of page 365External links editSpacetime Physics by Edwin F Taylor and John Archibald Wheeler Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Proper velocity amp oldid 1183134558, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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