0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Well since relativistic effects have been experimentally confirmed at speeds under 30 miles an hour, then I think we can ditch the classical approachAnd if it is momentum that changes with v = a, then in the case of free fall surely the energy change in momentum is due to that which is the cause of the acceleration, and not that which is being accelerated.
It's a bit of both. Mass increases with velocity and velocity increases with acceleration. That's why GR theorists prefer 4-momentum. It reminds them that relativistic mass is a consequence of spacetime dilation. It's typical insider terminology though. They want to make you feel stupid if you prefer to think in terms of relativistic mass. It's so passe.
Space time dilation of space, or space time dilation of time?
Both. That's what SR teaches us.
Not being able to 'know' exactly where one is in space is what led Katherine G Johnson to utilising Euler's theorem (?) in order to land space shuttle within 20 mile radius, and subsequently launch John Glenn into orbit?