Chapter 36 Solutions - galileo.harvard.edu
Transcription
Chapter 36 Solutions - galileo.harvard.edu
CHAPTER 36: The Special Theory of Relativity Responses to Questions 1. No. The train is an inertial reference frame, and the laws of physics are the same in all inertial reference frames, so there is no experiment you can perform inside the train car to determine if you are moving. 2. The fact that you instinctively think you are moving is consistent with the relativity principle applied to mechanics. Even though you are at rest relative to the ground, when the car next to you creeps forward, you are moving backward relative to that car. 3. As long as the railroad car is traveling with a constant velocity, the ball will land back in his hand. 4. The relativity principle refers only to inertial reference frames. Neither the reference frame of the Earth nor the reference frame of the Sun is inertial. Either reference frame is valid, but the laws of physics will not be the same in each of the frames. 5. The starlight would pass at c, regardless of your spaceship’s speed. This is consistent with the second postulate of relativity which states that the speed of light through empty space is independent of the speed of the source or the observer. 6. It deals with space-time (sometimes called “the fabric of space-time”) and the actual passage of time in the reference frame, not with the mechanical workings of clocks. Any measurement of time (heartbeats or decay rates, for instance) would be measured as slower than normal when viewed by an observer outside the moving reference frame. 7. Time actually passes more slowly in the moving reference frames, according to observers outside the moving frames. 8. This situation is an example of the “twin paradox” applied to parent-child instead of to twins. This might be possible if the woman was traveling at high enough speeds during her trip. Time would have passed more slowly for her and she could have aged less than her son, who stayed on Earth. (Note that the situations of the woman and son are not symmetric; she must undergo acceleration during her journey.) 9. No, you would not notice any change in your heartbeat, mass, height, or waistline, because you are in the inertial frame of the spaceship. Observers on Earth, however, would report that your heartbeat is slower and your mass greater than if you were at rest with respect to them. Your height and waistline will depend on your orientation with respect to the motion. If you are “standing up” in the spaceship such that your height is perpendicular to the direction of travel, then your height would not change but your waistline would shrink. If you happened to be “lying down” so that your body is parallel to the direction of motion when the Earth observers peer through the telescope, then you would appear shorter but your waistline would not change. 10. Yes. However, at a speed of only 90 km/hr, v/c is very small, and therefore γ is very close to one, so the effects would not be noticeable. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 427 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition Instructor Solutions Manual 11. Length contraction and time dilation would not occur. If the speed of light were infinite, v/c would be zero for all finite values of v, and therefore γ would always be one, resulting in t t0 and l l 0. 12. The effects of special relativity, such as time dilation and length contraction, would be noticeable in our everyday activities because everyday speeds would no longer be so small compared to the speed of light. There would be no “absolute time” on which we would all agree, so it would be more difficult, for instance, to plan to meet friends for lunch at a certain time! In addition, 25 m/s would be the limiting speed and nothing in the universe would move faster than that. 13. Both the length contraction and time dilation formulas include the term 1 v 2 c 2 . If c were not the limiting speed in the universe, then it would be possible to have a situation with v > c. However, this would result in a negative number under the square root, which gives an imaginary number as a result, indicating that c must be the limiting speed. 14. Mr. Tompkins appears shrunk in the horizontal direction, since that is the direction of his motion, and normal size in the vertical direction, perpendicular to his direction of motion. This length contraction is a result of the fact that, to the people on the sidewalk, Mr. Tompkins is in a moving frame of reference. If the speed of light were only 20 mi/h, then the amount of contraction, which depends on γ, would be enough to be noticeable. Therefore, Mr. Tompkins and his bicycle appear very skinny. (Compare to the chapter-opening figure, which is shown from Mr. Tompkin’s viewpoint. In this case, Mr. Tompkins sees himself as “normal” but all the objects moving with respect to him are contracted.) mv 15. No. The relativistic momentum of the electron is given by p mv . At low speeds 1 v 2 c2 (compared to c) this reduces to the classical momentum, p = mv. As v approaches c, γ approaches infinity so there is no upper limit to the electron’s momentum. 16. No. To accelerate a particle with nonzero rest mass up to the speed of light would require an infinite amount of energy, and so is not possible. 17. No. E = mc² does not conflict with the principle of conservation of energy as long as it is understood that mass is a form of energy. 18. Yes, mass is a form of energy so technically it is correct to say that a spring has more mass when compressed. However, the change in mass of the spring is very small and essentially negligible. 19. “Energy can be neither created nor destroyed.” Mass is a form of energy, and mass can be “destroyed” when it is converted to other forms of energy. The total amount of energy remains constant. 20. Technically yes, the notion that velocities simply add is wrong. However, at everyday speeds, the relativistic equations reduce to classical ones, so our ideas about velocity addition are essentially true for velocities that are low compared to the speed of light. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 428 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity Solutions to Problems 1. You measure the contracted length. Find the rest length from Eq. 36-3a. l 38.2 m l0 72.5m 2 2 2 1 v c 1 0.850 2. We find the lifetime at rest from Eq. 36-1a. t0 2 t 1 v c 2 6 4.76 10 s 2.70 108 m s 3.00 108 m s 1 2 3. The numerical values and graph were generated in a spreadsheet. The graph is shown also. The spreadsheet used for this problem can be found on the Media Manager, with filename “PSE4_ISM_CH36.XLS,” on tab “Problem 36.3.” 4. The measured distance is the contracted length. Use Eq. 36-3a. 2 l 5. l0 1 v c v 1 2 48.5 ly t 1 v 2 c2 c 1 t0 t 2 c 1 2.60 10 8 s 4.40 10 8 s 2 0.807c 2.42 108 m s The speed is determined from the length contraction relationship, Eq. 36-3a. l 7. 135 ly 2.80 108 m s 3.00 108 m s The speed is determined from the time dilation relationship, Eq. 36-1a. t0 6. 2 2.07 10 6 s l 0 1 v2 c2 v c 1 l l0 2 c 1 35ly 56ly 2 0.78c 2.3 108 m s The speed is determined from the length contraction relationship, Eq. 36-3a. Then the time is found from the speed and the contracted distance. l l 0 1 v 2 c2 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 429 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition v c 1 l l0 2 l v ; t l 8. 2 2 25ly 65ly c 1 25y c c 0.923 27 y The speed is determined from the length contraction relationship, Eq. 36-3a. l 9. 25ly l l0 c 1 Instructor Solutions Manual l 0 1 v2 c2 v 2 l l0 c 1 c 1 0.900 2 0.436 c The change in length is determined from the length contraction relationship, Eq. 36-3a. The speed is very small compared to the speed of light. l l 0 1 v2 c2 l l0 2 1 v c v2 1 2 c 2 1/ 2 1 2 1 So the percent decrease is 6.97 10 8 v2 c2 11.2 103 m s 3.00 108 m s 1 2 1 2 1 6.97 10 10 %. 10. (a) The measured length is the contracted length. We find the rest length from Eq. 36-3a. l 4.80m l0 7.39 m 2 2 2 1 v c 1 0.760 Distances perpendicular to the motion do not change, so the rest height is 1.35m . (b) The time in the spacecraft is the rest time, found from Eq. 36-1a. t0 t 1 v 2 c2 20.0s 1 0.760 2 13.0s (c) To your friend, you moved at the same relative speed: 0.760 c . (d) She would measure the same time dilation: 13.0s . 11. (a) We use Eq. 36-3a for length contraction with the contracted length 99.0% of the rest length. 2 l l0 1 v c 2 v c 1 l l0 2 c 1 0.990 2 0.141c (b) We use Eq. 36-1a for time dilation with the time as measured from a relative moving frame 1.00% greater than the rest time. 2 t0 1 t0 t 1 v c v c 1 c 1 t 1.0100 We see that a speed of 0.14 c results in about a 1% relativistic effect. 2 2 2 0.140 c 12. (a) To an observer on Earth, 18.6 ly is the rest length, so the time will be the distance divided by the speed. 18.6 ly l0 tEarth 19.58 yr 19.6 yr v 0.950 c (b) The time as observed on the spacecraft is shorter. Use Eq. 36-1a. t0 t 1 v 2 c2 19.58yr 1 0.950 2 6.114 yr 6.11yr © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 430 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity (c) To the spacecraft observer, the distance to the star is contracted. Use Eq. 36-3a. l 0 1 v 2 c2 l 18.6 ly 1 0.950 2 5.808 ly 5.81 ly (d) To the spacecraft observer, the speed of the spacecraft is their observed distance divided by their observed time. 5.808 ly l v 0.950 c t0 6.114 yr 13. (a) In the Earth frame, the clock on the Enterprise will run slower. Use Eq. 36-1a. t0 t 1 v 2 c2 5.0yr 1 0.74 2 3.4 yr (b) Now we assume the 5.0 years is the time as measured on the Enterprise. Again use Eq. 36-1a. 5.0 yr t0 t0 t 1 v 2 c2 t 7.4 yr 2 1 v 2 c2 1 0.74 14. We find the speed of the particle in the lab frame, and use that to find the rest frame lifetime and distance. xlab 1.00 m v 2.941 108 m s 0.9803 c tlab 3.40 10 9 s (a) Find the rest frame lifetime from Eq. 36-1a. t0 tlab 1 v 2 c 2 3.40 10 9 s 1 0.9803 2 6.72 10 10 s (b) In its rest frame, the particle will travel the distance given by its speed and the rest lifetime. x0 v t0 2.941 108 m s 6.72 10 10 s 0.198m This could also be found from the length contraction relationship: x0 xlab 1 v2 c2 . 15. Since the number of particles passing per second is reduced from N to N / 2, a time T0 must have elapsed in the particles’ rest frame. The time T elapsed in the lab frame will be greater, according to Eq. 36-1a. The particles moved a distance of 2cT0 in the lab frame during that time. T0 x 2cT0 4 T0 T 1 v 2 c 2 T ; v v 0.894 c 5c 2 2 T0 T 1 v c 1 v 2 c2 16. The dimension along the direction of motion is contracted, and the other two dimensions are unchanged. Use Eq. 36-3a to find the contracted length. l l 0 1 v 2 c2 ; V l l0 2 l0 3 1 v 2 c2 2.0m 3 1 0.80 2 4.8m3 17. The vertical dimensions of the ship will not change, but the horizontal dimensions will be contracted according to Eq. 36-3a. The base will be contracted as follows. l base l 1 v 2 c2 l 1 0.95 2 0.31l 0.50l 75.52 . 2.0l 1.936l is unchanged. The horizontal When at rest, the angle of the sides with respect to the base is given by The vertical component of l vert 2l sin 2l sin75.52 cos 1 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 431 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition component, which is 2 l cos 2l 0.50l 1 v 2 c2 l horizontal 1 4 Instructor Solutions Manual 0.50l at rest, will be contracted in the same way as the base. 0.50l 1 2 0.95 0.156l Use the Pythagorean theorem to find the length of the leg. l 2horizontal l leg l 2vert 2 0.156l 2 1.936l 1.942l 1.94l 18. In the Earth frame, the average lifetime of the pion will be dilated according to Eq. 36-1a. The speed of the pion will be the distance moved in the Earth frame times the dilated time. d d v 1 v 2 c2 t t0 v 1 c c t0 d 1 2 1 c 3.00 10 m s 2.6 10 8 s 1 0.95 c 2 8 25m 19. We take the positive direction in the direction of the Enterprise. Consider the alien vessel as reference frame S, and the Earth as reference frame S . The velocity of the Earth relative to the alien vessel is v 0.60 c. The velocity of the Enterprise relative to the Earth is ux 0.90 c. Solve for the velocity of the Enterprise relative to the alien vessel, u x , using Eq. 36-7a. ux v 0.90c 0.60c ux 0.65c vux 1 0.60 0.90 1 c2 We could also have made the Enterprise as reference frame S, with v 0.90 c, and the velocity of the alien vessel relative to the Earth as ux 0.60 c. The same answer would result. Choosing the two spacecraft as the two reference frames would also work. Let the alien vessel be reference frame S, and the Enterprise be reference frame S . Then we have the velocity of the Earth 0.60 c, and the velocity of the Earth relative to the Enterprise as relative to the alien vessel as ux ux 0.90 c. We solve for v, the velocity of the Enterprise relative to the alien vessel. ux v .60c 0.90c ux ux ux v 0.65c vux ux ux 0.90c .60c 1 1 1 c2 c2 c2 20. The Galilean transformation is given in Eq. 36-4. (a) x, y , z x vt , y , z 25m 30m s 3.5s ,20m,0 130m,20m,0 (b) x, y , z x vt , y , z 25m 30m s 10.0s ,20m,0 325m,20m,0 21. (a) The person’s coordinates in S are found using Eq. 36-6, with x t 25 m , y 20 m , z 0 , and 8 3.5 s. We set v 1.80 10 m/s. x x y 1 v 2 c2 y 20 m ; z 1.8 108 m/s 3.5 s 25m vt 8 1 1.8 10 m/s z 2 8 3.0 10 m/s 2 820 m 0 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 432 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity (b) We repeat part (a) using the time t x x 1 v 2 c2 y y 1.8 108 m/s 10.0 s 25m vt 1.8 108 m/s 1 20 m ; z 10.0 s. z 2 3.0 108 m/s 2280 m 2 0 22. We determine the components of her velocity in the S frame using Eq. 36-7, where ux u y 1.10 108 m/s and v 1.80 108 m/s . Then using trigonometry we combine the components to determine the magnitude and direction. ux v 1.10 108 m/s 1.80 108 m/s ux 1 vux / c 2 1 1.80 108 m/s 1.10 108 m/s / 3.00 108 m/s uy u 1.10 108 m/s u y 1 v 2 c2 1 vux / c 2 ux2 u 2y tan 1 uy 1 1.8 108 m/s 8 2 3.0 108 m/s 8 8 1.80 10 m/s 1.10 10 m/s / 3.00 10 m/s 2.38 108 m/s tan ux 1 1 2 7.21 107 m/s 2.38 108 m/s 7.21 107 m/s 2 2.38 108 m/s 2 2 2 7.21 107 m/s 2.49 108 m/s 16.9 23. (a) We take the positive direction to be the direction of motion of spaceship 1. Consider spaceship 2 as reference frame S, and the Earth reference frame S . The velocity of the Earth relative to spaceship 2 is v 0.60 c. The velocity of spaceship 1 relative to the Earth is ux 0.60 c. Solve for the velocity of spaceship 1 relative to spaceship 2, u x , using Eq. 36-7a. ux v 0.60 c 0.60 c ux 0.88 c vux 1 0.60 0.60 1 c2 (b) Now consider spaceship 1 as reference frame S. The velocity of the Earth relative to spaceship 1 is v 0.60 c. Solve for the 0.60 c. The velocity of spaceship 2 relative to the Earth is ux velocity of spaceship 2 relative to spaceship 1, u x , using Eq. 36-7a. ux v 0.60 c 0.60 c ux 0.88 c vux 1 0.60 0.60 1 c2 As expected, the two relative velocities are the opposite of each other. 24. (a) The Galilean transformation is given in Eq. 36-4. x x vt x vt 100m 0.92 3.00 108 m s 1.00 10 6 s 376m (b) The Lorentz transformation is given in Eq. 36-6. Note that we are given t, the clock reading in frame S. vx t vx t t t 2 c c2 x x vt x v t vx c2 x v ct c vx c © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 433 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition 1 1 0.92 2 100m 0.92 Instructor Solutions Manual 1 0.92 2 3.00 108 m s 1.00 10 6 s 0.92 100m 316m 25. (a) We take the positive direction in the direction of the first spaceship. We choose reference frame S as the Earth, and reference frame S as the first spaceship. So v 0.61c. The speed of the second spaceship relative to the first spaceship is ux 0.87 c. We use Eq. 36-7a to solve for the speed of the second spaceship relative to the Earth, u. ux v 0.87c 0.61c ux 0.97 c vux 1 0.61 0.87 1 c2 (b) The only difference is now that ux 0.87 c. ux v 0.87c 0.61c ux 0.55 c vux 1 0.61 0.87 1 c2 The problem asks for the speed, which would be 0.55c 26. We assume that the given speed of 0.90c is relative to the planet that you are approaching. We take the positive direction in the direction that you are traveling. Consider your spaceship as reference frame S, and the planet as reference frame S . The velocity of the planet relative to you is v 0.90 c. The velocity of the probe relative to the planet is ux 0.95 c. Solve for the velocity of the probe relative to your spaceship, u x , using Eq. 36-7a. ux v 0.95c 0.90c ux 0.34c vux 1 0.90 0.95 1 c2 27. We set frame S as the frame at rest with the spaceship. In this frame the module has speed u u y 0.82c. Frame S is the frame that is stationary with respect to the Earth. The spaceship, and therefore frame S moves in the x-direction with speed 0.76c in this frame, or v 0.76c. We use Eq. 36-7a and 36-7b to determine the components of the module velocity in frame S. Then using trigonometry we combine the components to determine the speed and direction of travel. ux ux v 1 vux / c 2 0 0.76c 1 0 u ux2 0.76c u 2y 2 0.533c 2 u y 1 v 2 c2 0.82c 1 0.762 0.533c 1 vux / c 2 1 0 u 0.533c 0.93c ; tan 1 y tan 1 35 ux 0.76c 0.76c ; u y 28. The velocity components of the particle in the S frame are ux u cos and u y u sin . We find the components of the particle in the S frame from the velocity transformations given in Eqs. 36-7a and 36-7b. Those transformations are for the S frame moving with speed v relative to the S frame. We can find the transformations from the S frame to the S frame by simply changing v to –v and primed to unprimed variables. ux ux v 1 vux c 2 ux ux v 1 vux c 2 ; uy u y 1 v2 c2 1 vux c 2 uy u y 1 v2 c2 1 vu x c 2 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 434 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity uy 1 v2 c2 1 vu x c 2 uy tan ux ux uy 1 v2 c2 v ux 1 vu x c u sin 1 v 2 c 2 u cos v v sin 1 v 2 c 2 cos vu 2 29. (a) In frame S the horizontal component of the stick length will be contracted, while the vertical component remains the same. We use the trigonometric relations to determine the x- and ycomponents of the length of the stick. Then using Eq. 36-3a we determine the contracted length of the x-component. Finally, we use the Pythagorean theorem to determine stick length in frame S . lx l 0 cos l l x2 ; ly l y2 l 0 sin ly ; lx l 0 2 cos2 1 v 2 c2 l x 1 v 2 c2 l 02 sin 2 l 0 cos l0 1 1 v 2 c2 v cos 2 c (b) We calculate the angle from the length components in the moving frame. tan 1 ly lx tan l 0 sin 1 l 0 cos 2 1 v c 2 tan tan 1 2 1 v c 2 tan 1 tan 30. (a) We choose the train as frame S and the Earth as frame S. Since the guns fire simultaneously in S , we set these times equal to zero, that is tA tB 0. To simplify the problem we also set the location of gunman A equal to zero in frame S when the guns were fired, xA 0. This places gunman B at xB 55.0m. Use Eq. 36-6 to determine the time that each gunman fired his weapon in frame S. vxA v 0 tA tA 0 0 c2 c2 tB tB vxB c2 1 1 8 35.0 m/s 3.00 10 m/s 2 35m/s 55.0 m 0 8 3.00 10 m/s 2.14 10 2 14 s Therefore, in Frame S, A fired first. (b) As found in part (a), the difference in time is 2.14 10 14 s . (c) In the Earth frame of reference, since A fired first, B was struck first. In the train frame, A is moving away from the bullet fired toward him, and B is moving toward the bullet fired toward him. Thus B will be struck first in this frame as well. 31. We set frame S as the frame moving with the observer. Frame S is the frame in which the two light bulbs are at rest. Frame S is moving with velocity v with respect to frame S . We solve Eq. 36-6 for the time t in terms of t, x, and v. Using the resulting equation we determine the time in frame S that each bulb is turned on, given that in frame S the bulbs are turned on simultaneously at tA tB 0. Taking the difference in these times gives the time interval as measured by the observing moving with velocity v. x x x vt x vt t t vx = c2 t v x c2 vt t 1 v2 c2 vx c2 t vx c2 t t vx c2 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 435 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition tA tA vx A c2 0 v 0 c2 0 ; tB tB Instructor Solutions Manual vxB c2 0 vl c2 vl c2 vl c2 According to the observer, bulb B turned on first. t tB tA 32. We set up the two frames such that in frame S, the first object is located at the origin and the second object is located 220 meters from the origin, so xA 0 and xB 220 m. We set the time when event A occurred equal to zero, so tA 0 and tB 0.80 s. We then set the location of the two events in frame S equal, and using Eq. 36-6 we solve for the velocity. xA x B 0 220m xA x B xA vt A xB vtB ; v 2.5 108 m/s tA tB 0 0.88 s 33. From the boy’s frame of reference, the pole remains at rest with respect to him. As such, the pole will always remain 12.0 m long. As the boy runs toward the barn, relativity requires that the (relatively moving) barn contract in size, making the barn even shorter than its rest length of 10.0 m. Thus it is impossible, in the boy’s frame of reference, for the barn to be longer than the pole. So according to the boy, the pole will never completely fit within the barn. In the frame of reference at rest with respect to the barn, it is possible for the pole to be shorter than the barn. We use Eq. 36-3a to calculate the speed that the boy would have to run for the contracted length of the pole, l, to equal the length of the barn. l l 0 1 v 2 c2 v c 1 l 2 l 02 c 1 10.0 m 2 12.0 m 2 0.5528c If persons standing at the front and back door of the barn were to close both doors exactly when the pole was completely inside the barn, we would have two simultaneous events in the barn’s rest frame S with the pole completely inside the barn. Let us set the time for these two events as tA tB 0. In frame S these two events occur at the front and far side of the barn, or at xA 0 and xB 10.0m. Using Eq. 36-6, we calculate the times at which the barn doors close in the boy’s frame of reference. vx A v 0 tA tA 0 0 c2 c2 0.5528 10.0m vxB 1 0 2.211 10 8 s 2 8 2 c 3.00 10 m/s 1 0.5528 Therefore, in the boy’s frame of reference the far door of the barn closed 22.1 ns before the front door. If we multiply the speed of the boy by this time difference, we calculate the distance the boy traveled between the closing of the two doors. x vt 0.5528 3.00 108 m/s 2.211 10 8 s 3.67 m. tB tB We use Eq. 36-3a to determine the length of the barn in the boy’s frame of reference. l l 0 1 v2 c2 10.0 m 1 0.55282 8.33 m Subtracting the distance traveled between closing the doors from the length of the pole, we find the length of the barn in the boy’s frame of reference. l 0,pole x 12.0 m 3.67 m 8.33 m l barn Therefore, in the boy’s frame of reference, when the front of the pole reached the far door it was closed. Then 22.1 ns later, when the back of the pole reached the front door, that door was closed. In the boy’s frame of reference these two events are not simultaneous. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 436 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity 34. The momentum of the proton is given by Eq. 36-8. 1.67 10 27 kg 0.75 3.00 108 m s mv p mv 2 1 v 2 c2 1 0.75 5.7 10 19 kg m s 35. (a) We compare the classical momentum to the relativistic momentum. p classical mv 2 1 v 2 c2 1 0.10 0.995 mv prelativistic 1 v 2 c2 The classical momentum is about 0.5% in error. (b) We again compare the two momenta. p classical mv 1 v2 c2 1 0.60 mv prelativistic 2 0.8 1 v2 c2 The classical momentum is 20% in error. 36. The momentum at the higher speed is to be twice the initial momentum. We designate the initial state with a subscript “0”, and the final state with a subscript “f”. mvf vf2 2 2 2 0.26 c 1 vf c pf vf2 1 vf2 c 2 2 4 4 0.29c 2 2 2 2 2 mv v p0 1 vf c 0 1 0.26 0 1 v02 c 2 1 v02 c 2 vf2 0.29 2 c 1.29 vf 0.47 c 37. The two momenta, as measured in the frame in which the particle was initially at rest, will be equal to each other in magnitude. The lighter particle is designated with a subscript “1”, and the heavier particle with a subscript “2”. m1v1 m2 v2 p1 p2 2 2 1 v1 c 1 v22 c 2 v12 1 v12 c 2 v1 0.90 c m2 m1 2 v22 1 v22 c 2 6.68 10 1.67 10 27 kg 27 kg 2 0.60 c 1 2 0.60 2 9.0c 2 0.95 c 38. We find the proton’s momenta using Eq. 36-8. mp v1 mp 0.45 c p0.45 0.5039mp c ; p0.80 2 v12 1 0.45 1 c2 mp v2 mp 0.98 c p0.98 4.9247mp c 2 2 v2 1 0.98 1 c2 mp v2 1 v22 c2 mp 0.80 c 1 0.80 2 1.3333mp c © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 437 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition (a) p2 (b) p2 p1 p1 p1 p1 1.3333mpc 0.5039mpc 100 0.5039mpc 4.9247mp c 1.3333mpc 100 1.3333mpc Instructor Solutions Manual 100 164.6 160% 100 269.4 270% 39. The rest energy of the electron is given by Eq. 36-12. E mc 2 31 9.11 10 8.20 10 1.60 10 13 14 kg 3.00 108 m s J J MeV 2 8.20 10 14 J 0.511MeV 40. We find the loss in mass from Eq. 36-12. 200 MeV 1.60 10 13 J MeV E m 2 c2 3.00 108 m s 3.56 10 28 kg 4 10 28 kg 41. We find the mass conversion from Eq. 36-12. 8 1019 J E m 900 kg 2 c2 3.00 108 m s 42. We calculate the mass from Eq. 36-12. m E c2 1 mc 2 c2 27 8 1 1.6726 10 kg 2.9979 10 m s c2 1.6022 10 13 J MeV 2 938.2 MeV c 2 43. Each photon has momentum 0.50 MeV/c. Thus each photon has mass 0.50 MeV. Assuming the photons have opposite initial directions, then the total momentum is 0, and so the product mass will not be moving. Thus all of the photon energy can be converted into the mass of the particle. Accordingly, the heaviest particle would have a mass of 1.00MeV c2 , which is 1.78 10 30 kg. . 44. (a) The work is the change in kinetic energy. Use Eq. 36-10b. The initial kinetic energy is 0. 1 W K K final 1 mc 2 1 938.3MeV 1.39 104 MeV 1 0.9982 13.9GeV (b) The momentum of the proton is given by Eq. 36-8. 1 p mv 938.3MeV c 2 0.998 c 2 1 0.998 1.48 104 MeV c 14.8GeV c 45. We find the energy equivalent of the mass from Eq. 36-12. E mc2 1.0 10 3 kg 3.00 108 m s 2 9.0 1013 J We assume that this energy is used to increase the gravitational potential energy. E 9.0 1013 J E mgh m 9.2 109 kg hg 1.0 103 m 9.80m s2 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 438 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity 46. The work is the change in kinetic energy. Use Eq. 36-10b. The initial kinetic energy is 0. W1 1 mc 2 ; W2 K 0.99 c K 0.90 c 1 mc 2 1 mc 2 0.90 0.99 0.90 1 W2 W1 0.99 1 mc 2 1 mc 0.90 2 2 0.99 1 mc 0.90 0.90 0.90 1 1 0.99 2 1 0.902 1 1 1 0.902 3.7 1 47. The kinetic energy is given by Eq. 36-10. 1 mc 2 K mc 2 1 2 2 1 v c 3 c 4 v 2 0.866 c 48. The total energy of the proton is the kinetic energy plus the mass energy. Use Eq. 36-13 to find the momentum. E K mc 2 ; pc pc 2 E2 K2 mc 2 2 K 2 K mc 2 p 1638MeV c 2 mc 2 K 1 2 mc 2 mc 2 K 2 K2 950 MeV 2 K mc 2 1 2 938.3MeV 950 MeV 1638MeV 1.6GeV c 49. We find the speed in terms of c. The kinetic energy is given by Eq. 36-10 and the momentum by Eq. 36-8. 2.80 108 m s v 0.9333 c 3.00 108 m s p 1 1 mc 2 K 1 0.93332 1 mv 1 938.3MeV 938.3MeV c 2 0.9333 c 2 1674.6 MeV 2439 MeV c 1.67GeV 2.44GeV c 1 0.9333 50. We use Eq. 36-10 to find the speed from the kinetic energy. 1 1 mc 2 K 2 1 v c v c 1 1 K mc 2 2 2 1 mc 2 1 c 1 1.25MeV 1 0.511MeV 1 2 0.957 c 51. Since the proton was accelerated by a potential difference of 125 MV, its potential energy decreased by 125 MeV, and so its kinetic energy increased from 0 to 125 MeV. Use Eq. 36-10 to find the speed from the kinetic energy. K 1 mc 2 1 2 1 v c 2 1 mc 2 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 439 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition v 1 c 1 K mc 2 2 1 c 1 1 0.470 c 2 125MeV 1 938.3MeV Instructor Solutions Manual 52. We let M represent the rest mass of the new particle. The initial energy is due to both incoming particles, and the final energy is the rest energy of the new particle. Use Eq. 36-11 for the initial energies. 2m E 2 mc 2 Mc 2 M 2 m 1 v 2 c2 We assumed that energy is conserved, and so there was no loss of energy in the collision. The final kinetic energy is 0, so all of the kinetic energy was lost. Klost Kinitial 1 1 mc 2 2 2 1 v c 2 1 2mc 2 53. Since the electron was accelerated by a potential difference of 28 kV, its potential energy decreased by 28 keV, and so its kinetic energy increased from 0 to 28 MeV. Use Eq. 36-10 to find the speed from the kinetic energy. 1 1 mc 2 K 2 1 v c v 1 c 1 K mc 2 2 1 mc 2 2 1 c 1 1 0.32 c 2 0.028 MeV 1 0.511MeV 54. We use Eqs. 36-11 and 36-13 in order to find the mass. E2 m p2c2 m2c 4 p 2c 2 K 2 2 Kc 2 K mc 2 2 K2 2 Kmc 2 2 121MeV c c 2 45MeV 2 45MeV c 2 The particle is most likely a probably a 0 m 2c 4 2 140 MeV c 2 2.5 10 28 kg meson. 55. (a) Since the kinetic energy is half the total energy, and the total energy is the kinetic energy plus the rest energy, the kinetic energy must be equal to the rest energy. We also use Eq. 36-10. K 12 E 12 K mc 2 K mc 2 K 1 mc 2 mc 2 1 2 1 v 2 c2 (b) In this case, the kinetic energy is half the rest energy. 1 3 K 1 mc 2 12 mc 2 2 1 v 2 c2 3 4 v v c 5 9 0.866 c c 0.745 c © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 440 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity 56. We use Eq. 36-10 for the kinetic energy and Eq. 36-8 for the momentum. 1 1 mc 2 K 2 1 v c 1 1 mc 2 2 8.15 107 m s 3.00 108 m s 1 1 938.3MeV 2 36.7 MeV p 2 1 mc v c c 1 v 2 c2 mv mv 2 1 v c 2 1 c 8.15 107 m s 3.00 108 m s 938.3MeV 8.15 107 m s 3.00 108 m s 1 2 265MeV c Evaluate with the classical expressions. Kc 1 2 mv 2 1 2 mc 2 v c 2 1 2 938.3MeV 1 2 v 8.15 107 m s mc 938.3MeV c c 3.00 108 m s Calculate the percent error. Kc K 34.6 36.7 errorK 100 100 5.7% K 36.7 pc p 255 265 errorp 100 100 3.8% p 265 pc 2 8.15 107 m s 3.00 108 m s mv 34.6 MeV 255MeV c 57. (a) The kinetic energy is found from Eq. 36-10. K 1 1 mc 1 v 2 c2 1 1 mc 2 1 0.182 1 1.7 104 kg 3.00 108 m s 2 2.541 1019 J 2.5 1019 J (b) Use the classical expression and compare the two results. K 1 2 1 2 mv 1.7 104 kg 2.479 1019 J % error 0.18 3.00 108 m s 2.541 1019 J 100 2.541 1019 J 2 2.479 1019 J 2.4% The classical value is 2.4% too low. 58. The kinetic energy of 998 GeV is used to find the speed of the protons. Since the energy is 1000 times the rest mass, we expect the speed to be very close to c. Use Eq. 36-10. 1 1 mc 2 K 2 1 v c v c 1 1 K mc 2 2 1 c 1 2 1 mc 2 1 998GeV 1 0.938GeV 2 c to 7 sig. fig. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 441 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition B mv rqv 2 998GeV 1 1.673 10 0.938GeV K 1 mc mc 2 rq mv rq Instructor Solutions Manual 27 kg 3.00 108 m s 1.0 103 m 1.60 10 19 3.3T C 59. By conservation of energy, the rest energy of the americium nucleus is equal to the rest energies of the other particles plus the kinetic energy of the alpha particle. mAm c 2 mNp m c 2 K mNp mAm K c2 m 241.05682 u 4.00260 u 5.5MeV 1u 2 c 931.49 MeV c 2 237.04832 u 60. (a) For a particle of non-zero mass, we derive the following relationship between kinetic energy and momentum. K mc 2 ; E K 2 2 K mc 2 pc 2 E2 K mc 2 2mc 2 2 pc 2 mc 2 0 2 mc 2 4 mc 2 2 2 K2 4 pc 2 K mc 2 2 K 2 For the kinetic energy to be positive, we take the positive root. 2mc 2 4 mc 2 2 4 pc 2 mc 2 K mc 2 2 pc 2 2 If the momentum is large, we have the following relationship. K mc 2 mc 2 2 pc 2 pc mc 2 Thus there should be a linear relationship between kinetic energy and momentum for large values of momentum. If the momentum is small, we use the binomial expansion to derive the classical relationship. mc mc mc 2 2 2 2 mc 1 pc 1 2 pc mc 2 2 mc 2 2 mc 2 1 pc mc 2 2 p2 2m Thus we expect a quadratic relationship for small values of momentum. The adjacent graph verifies these approximations. (b) For a particle of zero mass, the relationship is simply K pc. See the included graph. The spreadsheet used for this problem can be found on the Media Manager, with filename “PSE4_ISM_CH36.XLS,” on tab “Problem 36.60.” m 0 m 0 K K 2 p © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 442 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity 61. All of the energy, both rest energy and kinetic energy, becomes electromagnetic energy. We use Eq. 36-11. Both masses are the same. 1 1 2 2 2 Etotal E1 E2 105.7 MeV 1mc 2 mc 1 2 mc 1 0.432 1 0.552 243.6 MeV 240 MeV 62. We use Eqs. 36-11 and 36-13. E mc 2 ; K K2 p pc 2 E2 mc 2 2 2 mc 2 K 2 mc 2 K2 2 K mc 2 2 K mc 2 c 63. (a) We assume the mass of the particle is m, and we are given that the velocity only has an xcomponent, u x . We write the momentum in each frame using Eq. 36-8, and we use the velocity transformation given in Eq. 36-7. Note that there are three relevant velocities: u x , the velocity in reference frame S; u x , the velocity in reference frame S ; and v, the velocity of one frame relative to the other frame. There is no velocity in the y or z directions, in either frame. We 1 , and also use Eq. 36-11 for energy. reserve the symbol for 1 v2 c2 mux px ; py 1 ux2 c 2 ux v 1 vux c 2 ux 1 ux2 c 2 0 ux v ; uy 1 vux c 2 ux mux px 0 ; pz ; py 0 since u y uy 0 ; pz 1 vux c 2 1 v 2 c2 0 since uz Substitute the expression for u x into the expression for px . ux v m 1 vux c 2 ux v mux px m 2 2 2 1 vu x c 2 1 ux c ux v 1 1 2 c 1 vu c 2 2 0 ; uz v 1 vux c 1 vux c 1 1 vu x c 2 m ux 1 2 vux c2 vu x c2 1 vu x c 2 2 u x2 c2 v 1 vu x c m ux 2u x v c2 v2 c2 1 vux c2 2 2 2 v 2 c2 1 vu x c 2 2 2 2 c2 v 2 ux ux 2 2 m ux 1 2 0 1 v 2 c2 1 1 vux c ux 1 vux c 2 0 x m uz 2 v ux v 2 c2 v ux2 c2 v2 c2 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 443 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition m ux v mux mv 1 ux2 c 2 1 ux2 c 2 1 v 2 c 2 1 ux2 c 2 1 v 2 c2 mc 2 mux 2 x 1 u c 2 Instructor Solutions Manual 2 x 1 u c v c2 2 mc 2 px 2 x 1 u c 1 v 2 c2 2 v c2 1 v 2 c2 1 v 2 c2 It is obvious from the first few equations of the problem that p y E mc 2 mc 2 1 u x2 c 2 0 and pz py 2 1 vu x c 2 1 vu x c 2 2 2 2 ux v mc 1 vu x c 1 vu x c E 2 mc ux 2 2 v 0. 2 c2 1 vu x c 2 2 mc 2 2 pz mc 2 ux v 1 2 c 1 vu c 2 x 1 vE c 2 px 2 2 2 x mvu x 1 u c mvu x 1 v 2 c 2 1 u x2 c 2 2 1 u x2 c 2 1 v 2 c2 c2 px v 1 v 2 c2 (b) We summarize these results, and write the Lorentz transformation from Eq. 36-6, but solved in terms of the primed variables. That can be easily done by interchanged primed and unprimed quantities, and changing v to v. px vE c 2 E px v px ; py py ; py py ; E 2 2 1 v c 1 v2 c2 x x vt ; y 1 v2 c2 y ; z z ; t t vx c 2 1 v2 c2 These transformations are identical if we exchange p x with x, p y with y, p z with z, and E c 2 with t (or E c with ct). 64. The galaxy is moving away from the Earth, and so we use Eq. 36-15b. f 0 f 0.0987 f 0 f 0.9013 f 0 f f0 c v c v 1 v f f0 1+ f f 0 2 2 c 1 0.90132 c 1 0.90132 0.1035 c 65. For source and observer moving towards each other, use Eq. 36-14b. c v 1 v c 1 0.70 f f0 f0 95.0 MHz 226 MHz c v 1 v c 1 0.70 230 MHz © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 444 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity 66. We use Eq. 36-15a, and assume that v c v c v 0 0 1 vc 1 vc 0 1 v c 1 v 2 c2 c. 1 vc 1 vc 1 vc 1 vc 0 1/ 2 1 v c 0 0 0 0 1 1 v 2 c2 1 v c v c 0 v c 0 0 67. (a) We apply Eq. 36-14b to determine the received/reflected frequency f. Then we apply this same equation a second time using the frequency f as the source frequency to determine the Dopplershifted frequency f . We subtract the initial frequency from this Doppler-shifted frequency to obtain the beat frequency. The beat frequency will be much smaller than the emitted frequency when the speed is much smaller than the speed of light. We then set c v c and solve for v. c v c v c v c v c v f f0 f f f0 f0 c v c v c v c v c v f beat f f0 f0 c v c v f0 3.00 108 m/s 6670 Hz v c v c v f0 2v c v f0 2v c v cf beat 2 f0 27.8m/s 2 36.0 109 Hz (b) We find the change in velocity and solve for the resulting change in beat frequency. Setting the change in the velocity equal to 1 km/h we solve for the change in beat frequency. cf beat c f beat 2 f0 v v v f beat 2 f0 2 f0 c f beat 2 36.0 109 Hz 1km/h 1m/s 3.600km/h 8 3.00 10 m/s 70 Hz 68. We consider the difference between Doppler-shifted frequencies for atoms moving directly towards the observer and atoms moving directly away. Use Eqs. 36-14b and 36-15b. f f0 c v c v f0 c v c v f0 c v c v c v c v 2v f0 c2 f0 v2 2v c 1 v 2 c2 We take the speed to be the rms speed of thermal motion, given by Eq. 18-5. We also assume that the thermal energy is much less than the rest energy, and so 3kT mc2 . 1/ 2 3kT v 3kT f 3kT 3kT 3kT 2 1 2 2 2 2 m c mc f0 mc mc mc 2 We evaluate for a gas of H atoms (not H 2 molecules) at 550 K. Use Appendix F to find the mass. v vrms f f0 3kT 2 mc 2 2 3 1.38 10 1.008u 1.66 10 23 27 J K 550 K 8 kg u 3.00 10 m s 2 2.5 10 5 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 445 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition Instructor Solutions Manual 69. At the North Pole the clock is at rest, while the clock on the equator travels the circumference of the Earth each day. We divide the circumference of the Earth by the length of the day to determine the speed of the equatorial clock. We set the dilated time equal to 2.0 years and solve for the change in rest times for the two clocks. 6 2 R 2 6.38 10 m v 464 m/s T 24 hr 3600s/hr t0,eq t 1 v 2 / c2 t0,pole t t0,pole 1 0 t0,eq t 1 v2 / c2 t0,eq t0,pole t 1 t 1 v2 2c 2 t v2 2c 2 t 2.0 yr 464 m/s v2 t 2 2c 2 3.156 107 s/yr 2 3.00 108 m/s 75 s 2 70. We take the positive direction in the direction of the motion of the second pod. Consider the first pod as reference frame S, and the spacecraft as reference frame S . The velocity of the spacecraft relative to the first pod is v 0.60 c. The velocity of the first pod relative to the spacecraft is ux 0.50 c. Solve for the velocity of the second pod relative to the first pod, u x , using Eq. 36-7a. ux v 0.50c 0.60c ux 0.846 c vux 1 0.60 0.50 1 c2 71. We treat the Earth as the stationary frame, and the airplane as the moving frame. The elapsed time in the airplane will be dilated to the observers on the Earth. Use Eq. 36-1a. 2 rEarth 2 rEarth tEarth ; tplane tEarth 1 v 2 c 2 1 v 2 c2 v v t tEarth tplane 2 rEarth 1 v 1 v 2 c2 1m s 3.6 km h 6.38 106 m 1300 km h 8 3.00 10 m s 2 rEarth 1 v 1 1 2 v2 c2 rEarth v c2 8.0 10 8 s 2 72. (a) To travelers on the spacecraft, the distance to the star is contracted, according to Eq. 36-3a. This contracted distance is to be traveled in 4.6 years. Use that time with the contracted distance to find the speed of the spacecraft. v xEarth 1 v 2 c 2 tspacecraft xspacecraft v tspacecraft 1 c 1 c tspacecraft xEarth 2 1 c 1 4.6ly 4.3ly 2 0.6829 c 0.68 c © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 446 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity (b) Find the elapsed time according to observers on Earth, using Eq. 36-1a. tspaceship 4.6y tEarth 6.3y 2 2 1 v c 1 0.68292 Note that this agrees with the time found from distance and speed. xEarth 4.3ly tEarth 6.3yr v 0.6829 c 73. (a) We use Eq. 36-15a. To get a longer wavelength than usual means that the object is moving away from the Earth. 1.0702 1 c v 1.070 c v 0.067c 0 0 c v 1.0702 1 (b) We assume that the quasar is moving and the Earth is stationary. Then we use Eq. 16-9b. f0 c c 1 f 1.070 0 v 0.070 c 0 1 v c 1 vc 0 1 v c 74. We assume that some kind of a light signal is being transmitted from the astronaut to Earth, with a frequency of the heartbeat. That frequency will then be Doppler shifted, according to Eq. 36-15b. We express the frequencies in beats per minute. f 02 f 2 602 302 c v f f0 v c 2 c 0.60 c c v f f 02 602 302 75. (a) The velocity components of the light in the S frame are ux 0 and u y c. We transform those velocities to the S frame according to Eq. 36-7. ux ux v 1 vux c 2 tan (b) u 1 uy tan ux ux2 u 2y 0 v 1 0 v2 1 v ; uy c 1 v2 c2 v c2 1 v 2 c2 u y 1 v2 c2 c 1 v2 c2 1 0 1 vux c 2 tan v2 1 c 1 v2 c2 c2 1 v2 c2 v 2 c (c) In a Galilean transformation, we would have the following. ux ux v v ; uy uy c ; u v2 c2 c ; tan 1 c v 76. We take the positive direction as the direction of motion of rocket A. Consider rocket A as reference frame S, and the Earth as reference frame S . The velocity of the Earth relative to rocket A is v 0.65 c. The velocity of rocket B relative to the Earth is ux 0.85 c. Solve for the velocity of rocket B relative to rocket A, u x , using Eq. 36-7a. ux v 0.85c 0.65c ux 0.45c vux 1 0.65 0.85 1 c2 Note that a Galilean analysis would have resulted in ux 0.20c. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 447 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition Instructor Solutions Manual 77. (a) We find the speed from Eq. 36-10. 1 1 mc 2 K 2 1 v c v 1 14,001 c 1 2 1 mc 2 2 14,000mc 2 2 c 1 c 2 14,001 2 2 3.00 108 m s c 1 1 0.77 m s 2 14,001 2 14,001 (b) The tube will be contracted in the rest frame of the electron, according to Eq. 36-3a. c v l 1 v 2 c2 l0 3.0 103 m 1 1 1 14,001 2 0.21m 78. The electrostatic force provides the radial acceleration. We solve that relationship for the speed of the electron. 1 e2 melectron v 2 Felectrostatic Fcentripetal 4 0 r2 r v 4 8.99 109 N m 2 C 2 e2 1 0 melectron r 31 9.11 10 kg 1.60 10 19 0.53 10 10 C 2 2.18 106 m s m 0.0073 c Because this is much less than 0.1c, the electron is not relativistic. 79. The minimum energy required would be the energy to produce the pair with no kinetic energy, so the total energy is their rest energy. They both have the same mass. Use Eq. 36-12. E 2mc 2 2 0.511MeV 1.022 MeV 1.64 10 13 J 80. The wattage times the time is the energy required. We use Eq. 36-12 to calculate the mass. 75W 3.16 107 s 1000g Pt 2 E Pt mc m 2.6 10 5 g 2 2 8 c 1kg 3.00 10 m s 81. Use Eqs. 36-13, 36-8, and 36-11. E2 p 2c2 dE dp 1 2 m2c4 p 2c2 E m2c4 1/ 2 p 2c 2 2 pc 2 m 2c 4 pc 2 E 1/ 2 pc 2 E mvc 2 mc 2 v 82. The kinetic energy available comes from the decrease in rest energy. K mnc2 mpc2 mec2 mvc2 939.57MeV 938.27MeV 0.511MeV 0 0.79MeV 83. (a) We find the rate of mass loss from Eq. 36-12. E mc 2 E m c2 m t 1 c2 E t 4 1026 J s 8 3.00 10 m s 2 4.44 109 kg s 4 109 kg s © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 448 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity (b) Find the time from the mass of the Sun and the rate determined in part (a). 5.98 1024 kg mEarth t 4.27 107 y 4 107 y m t 4.44 109 kg s 3.156 107 s y (c) We find the time for the Sun to lose all of its mass at this same rate. 1.99 1030 kg mSun t 1.42 1013 y 1 1013 y m t 4.44 109 kg s 3.156 107 s y 84. Use Eq. 36-8 for the momentum to find the mass. mv p mv 1 v 2 c2 2.24 108 m s 3.00 108 m s 22 2 3.07 10 kg m s 1 p 1 v 2 c2 m 9.12 10 31 kg v 2.24 108 m s This particle has the mass of an electron, and a negative charge, so it must be an electron. 85. The total binding energy is the energy required to provide the increase in rest energy. E 2mp+e mHe c 2 2mn 2 1.00783u 4.00260 u c 2 2 1.00867 u 931.5MeV c 2 u 28.32 MeV 86. The momentum is given by Eq. 36-8, and the energy is given by Eq. 36-11 and Eq. 36-13. P mv mc 2 v c2 Ev c2 v pc 2 E pc 2 m2c4 pc p 2c 2 m2c2 87. (a) The magnitudes of the momenta are equal. We use Eq. 36-8. 2 mv 1 mc v c 1 938.3MeV 0.985 p mv 1 v 2 c2 c 1 v 2 c2 c 1 0.9852 5.36GeV c 2.86 10 18 5.36GeV c 1c 3.00 108 m s p2 5356 MeV c 1.602 10 10 J GeV 1GeV kg m s (b) Because the protons are moving in opposite directions, the vector sum of the momenta is 0. (c) In the reference frame of one proton, the laboratory is moving at 0.985c. The other proton is moving at 0.985c relative to the laboratory. We find the speed of one proton relative to the other, and then find the momentum of the moving proton in the rest frame of the other proton by using that relative velocity. 0.985 c 0.985 c v ux ux 0.9999 c vux 1 0.985 0.985 1 c2 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 449 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition p 2 1 mc ux c c 1 u x2 c 2 mux mux 2 x 1 u c 62.1GeV c 3.31 10 17 2 62.1GeV c Instructor Solutions Manual 938.3MeV 1 c 2 0.985 1 0.9852 1 1c 3.00 108 m s 2 0.985 1 0.9852 62081MeV c 2 1.602 10 10 J GeV 1GeV kg m s 88. We find the loss in mass from Eq. 36-12. E 484 103 J m 5.38 10 2 c2 3.00 108 m s 12 kg Two moles of water has a mass of 36 10 3 kg. Find the percentage of mass lost. 5.38 10 12 kg 36 10 3 kg 1.49 10 10 1.5 10 8 % 89. Use Eq. 36-10 for kinetic energy, and Eq. 36-12 for rest energy. K 1 mEnterprise c 2 mconverted c 2 mconverted 1 2 1 v c 2 1 mEnterprise 1 1 0.10 2 1 6 109 kg 3 107 kg 90. We set the kinetic energy of the spacecraft equal to the rest energy of an unknown mass. Use Eqs. 36-10 and 36-12. K 1 mshipc 2 mc 2 m 1 mship 1 2 2 1 1 mship 2 1 1.8 105 kg 7.2 104 kg 1 v c 1 0.70 From the Earth’s point of view, the distance is 35 ly and the speed is 0.70c. That data is used to calculate the time from the Earth frame, and then Eq. 36-1a is used to calculate the time in the spaceship frame. 35y c d t 50 y ; t0 t 1 v 2 c2 50 y 1 0.702 36 y v 0.70c 91. We assume one particle is moving in the negative direction in the laboratory frame, and the other particle is moving in the positive direction. We consider the particle moving in the negative direction as reference frame S, and the laboratory as reference frame S . The velocity of the laboratory relative to the negative-moving particle is v 0.85 c, and the velocity of the positivemoving particle relative to the laboratory frame is ux 0.85 c. Solve for the velocity of the positivemoving particle relative to the negative-moving particle, u x . ux v 0.85c 0.85c ux 0.987 c vux 1 0.85 0.85 1 c2 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 450 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity 92. We consider the motion from the reference frame of the spaceship. The passengers will see the trip distance contracted, as given by Eq. 36-3a. They will measure their speed to be that contracted distance divided by the year of travel time (as measured on the ship). Use that speed to find the work done (the kinetic energy of the ship). v l 0 1 v 2 c2 t0 l t0 v c 1 c t0 l0 1 W 1 1 mc 2 K 1 1 0.9887 1 2 1 3.2 104 kg 3.00 108 m s 2 0.9887 c 2 1.0ly 6.6ly 1 mc 2 v 2 c2 1 1 2 1.6 1022 J 93. The kinetic energy is given by Eq. 36-10. 1 1 mc 2 K 1 v 2 c2 1 1 mc 2 1 0.98 1 14,500 kg 3.00 108 m s 2 2 5.3 1021 J 5.3 1021 J 1020 J We compare this with annual U.S. energy consumption: 53. The spaceship’s kinetic energy is over 50 times as great. 94. The pi meson decays at rest, and so the momentum of the muon and the neutrino must each have the same magnitude (and opposite directions). The neutrino has no rest mass, and the total energy must be conserved. We combine these relationships using Eq. 36-13. pv 2 c 2 Ev E E m c2 1/ 2 mv 2 c 4 m c2 Ev p 2c 2 pc pv c ; p pv p 2c 2 m 2c 4 p m 2c 4 1/ 2 1/ 2 m c2 pv c 2 pc p 2c 2 p 2c 2 m 2c 4 1/ 2 pc m 2c 4 Solve for the momentum. m 2c4 2m c 2 pc p 2c 2 p 2c 2 m 2c 4 m c2 m c2 m c2 pc m 2c 2 m 2c2 2m Write the kinetic energy of the muon using Eqs. 36-11 and 36-13. K E m c2 ; E E Ev m c 2 pc K m c2 pc m 2c2 m 2c2 2m 2m m c 2 m c 2 m 2c 2 m 2c 2 2m 2m 2m 2 2m m m 2 m 2 c2 m 2m 2 2m m 2m m 2 c2 m m 2 c2 2m © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 451 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition Instructor Solutions Manual 95. (a) The relative speed can be calculated in either frame, and will be the same value in both frames. The time as measured on the Earth will be longer than the time measured on the spaceship, as given by Eq. 36-1a. tspaceship tspaceship xEarth v ; tEarth 2 2 2 tEarth 1 v c xEarth 1 c tEarth tEarth 2 xEarth c 2 tspaceship 2 tEarth xEarth c 2 2 2 tspaceship 2 2 xEarth 2 2 tEarth tspaceship 6.0 y 2.50 y 6.5y c (b) The distance as measured by the spaceship will be contracted. xspaceship tspaceship xEarth 2.50 y v xspaceship xEarth 6.0ly tEarth tspaceship tEarth 6.5y 2.3ly This is the same distance as found using the length contraction relationship. 96. (a) To observers on the ship, the period is non-relativistic. Use Eq. 14-7b. T m k 2 1.88kg 84.2 N m 2 0.939s (b) The oscillating mass is a clock. According to observers on Earth, clocks on the spacecraft run slow. 0.939s T TEarth 2.15s 2 2 2 1 v c 1 0.900 97. We use the Lorentz transformations to derive the result. x c t x 2 vt x x 2 c 2 x c t 1 1 v 2 c2 2 ; t x v x 2c t c c2 v2 t 1 c2 1 v 2 c2 1 v 2 c2 1 v 2 c2 2 1 v c 2 vx c2 t t 2 v x c2 t 2 v t c t 2 x v t v x c v c 2 t 2 2 2 2 c t t v x c v x c2 2 x v t 2 x 2 2 xv t v t 2 2 1 x 1 v2 c2 c t 2 2 x x 2 2 © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 452 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity 98. We assume that the left edge of the glass is even with point A when the flash of light is emitted. There is no loss of generality with that assumption. We do the calculations in the frame of reference in which points A and B are at rest, and the glass is then moving to the right with speed v. If the glass is not moving, we would have this “no motion” result. distance in glass distance in vacuum d tv 0 tglass tvacuum speed in glass speed in vacuum vglass l d c d l d nd l d nd l d l n 1 d cn c c c c c If the index of refraction is n 1, then the glass will have no effect on the light, and the time would simply be the distance divided by the speed of light. distance in glass distance in vacuum d l d d l d l tn 1 tglass tvacuum speed in glass speed in vacuum c c c c Now, let us consider the problem from a relativistic point of view. The speed of light in the glass will be the relativistic sum of the speed of light in stationary glass, c n , and the speed of the glass, v, by Eq. 36-7a. We define to simplify further expressions. vn vn c c 1 1 v v c c c c n n vlight cv v v v n n in glass 1 1 1 1 nc 2 nc nc nc The contracted width of the glass, from the Earth frame of reference, is given by Eq. 36-3a. d d moving d 1 v 2 c 2 glass We assume the light enters the block when the left edge of the block is at point A, and write simple equations for the displacement of the leading edge of the light, and the leading edge of the block. Set them equal and solve for the time when the light exits the right edge of the block. c d xlight vlight t t ; xright vt ; n in glass edge c d d n xlight xright tglass vtglass tglass n c nv edge Where is the front edge of the block when the light emerges? Use tglass d n c nv with either expression – for the leading edge of the light, or the leading edge of the block. cd n cd xlight vlight tglass n c nv c nv in glass xright d vtglass d v d edge d n c nv The part of the path that is left, l c nv vdn c nv cd c nv cd , will be traveled at speed c by the light. We express c nv that time, and then find the total time. cd l c nv tvacuum c © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 453 Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition ttotal tglass tvacuum tglass d cd c nv c l n Instructor Solutions Manual c nv l c d n c nv n 1 d c v l c c c v We check this for the appropriate limiting cases. n 1 d c v l n 1 d c c l l Case 1: ttotal c c c v c c c c c v c This result was expected, because the speed of the light would always be c. n 1 d c v l n 1 d l n 1 d l 1 Case 2: ttotal c c c v c c c v 0 This result was obtained earlier in the solution. n 1 d c v l l Case 3: ttotal c c c v c n 1 This result was expected, because then there is no speed change in the glass. 99. The spreadsheet used for this problem can be found on the Media Manager, with filename “PSE4_ISM_CH36.XLS,” on tab “Problem 36.99.” 1.2 K (10 17 J) 1.0 Classical Relativistic 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 v /c 0.8 1 100. (a) We use Eq. 36-98. Since there is motion in two dimensions, we have v2 1 x2 c dp y dp dpx ; 0 px mvx p0 ; F dt dt dt Use the component equations to obtain expressions for v x2 and v 2y . Fˆj F mv x p0 mv y v 2 y vx Ft 2 2 F t p0 m vy c2 m2c2 p02 2 2 m v x2 Ft m v 2y F 2t 2 2 2 m p02 v2 1 x2 2 m c py v 2y v x2 c2 F 2t 2 v x2 1 m2 c2 v 2y c2 Ft p02 . mv y c2 m2c2 v 2y p02 v 2y c2 v x2 F 2t 2 Substitute the expression for v 2y into the expression for v x2 . © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 454 Chapter 36 The Special Theory of Relativity v 2 x 2 0 p c2 v 2y m2c 2 v x2 m 2 c 2 c2 2 0 p p02 p02 m 2 c 2 v x2 m 4 c 4 v x2 m 2c 2 p02 v x2 m 2 c 2 v x2 p02 F 2t 2 m 2c 2 F 2t 2 v x2 p02 m 2c 2 F 2t 2 F 2t 2 v x2 v x2 F 2t 2 p02 p02c 2 m2c 4 p02 p02 p02 m 2 c 4 v x2 F 2t 2m 2c 2 v x2 m2c2 m2c 2 F 2t 2 v x2 F 2t 2 c2 F 2t 2 vx p02m 2c 4 p02 F 2t 2v x2 p0c 2 2 mc p02 F 2t 2 1/ 2 Use the expression for v x to solve for v y . v 2y F 2t 2 c2 m2c 2 F t vy v x2 m2c 2 m2c2 F 2t 2 F 2t 2 c 2 m 2c 2 2 2 c2 p02 m 2c 2 F 2t 2 F 2t 2 m 2 c 2 p02c 2 p02 F 2t 2 p02 c 2 p02 F 2t 2 F 2t 2 c2 m2c 2 2 2 F t m 2c 2 F 2t 2 F 2t 2 m 2 c 2 p02 F 2t 2 Ftc m2c 2 p02 F 2t 2 1/ 2 The negative sign comes from taking the negative square root of the previous equation. We know that the particle is moving down. (b) See the graph. We are plotting v x c and v y c . 0.8 vx (- vy) 0.6 v /c The spreadsheet used for this problem can be found on the Media Manager, with filename “PSE4_ISM_CH36.XLS,” on tab “Problem 36.100.” 1.0 0.4 0.2 0.0 0 1 2 t ( s) 3 4 5 (c) The path is not parabolic, because the v x is not constant. Even though there is no force in the xdirection, as the net speed of the particle increases, increases. Thus v x must decrease as time elapses in order for p x to stay constant. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ. All rights reserved. This material is protected under all copyright laws as they currently exist. No portion of this material may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. 455