EBK PHYSICS FOR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEER
9th Edition
ISBN: 8220100663987
Author: Jewett
Publisher: Cengage Learning US
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Textbook Question
Chapter 39, Problem 39.3OQ
As a car heads down a highway traveling at a speed v away from a ground observer, which of the following statements are true about the measured speed of the light beam from the car’s headlights? More than one statement may be correct, (a) The ground observer measures the
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EBK PHYSICS FOR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEER
Ch. 39 - Which observer in Figure 38.1 sees the balls...Ch. 39 - A baseball pitcher with a 90-mi/h fastball throws...Ch. 39 - Suppose the observer O on the train in Figure 38.6...Ch. 39 - A crew on a spacecraft watches a movie that is two...Ch. 39 - Suppose astronauts are paid according to the...Ch. 39 - You are packing for a trip to another star. During...Ch. 39 - You are observing a spacecraft moving away from...Ch. 39 - You are driving on a freeway at a relativistic...Ch. 39 - The following pairs of energiesparticle 1: E, 2E;...Ch. 39 - (i) Does the speed of an electron have an upper...
Ch. 39 - A spacecraft zooms past the Earth with a constant...Ch. 39 - As a car heads down a highway traveling at a speed...Ch. 39 - A spacecraft built in the shape of a sphere moves...Ch. 39 - An astronaut is traveling in a spacecraft in outer...Ch. 39 - You measure the volume of a cube at rest to be V0....Ch. 39 - Two identical clocks are set side by side and...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.8OQCh. 39 - Which of the following statements are fundamental...Ch. 39 - A distant astronomical object (a quasar) is moving...Ch. 39 - In several cases, a nearby star has been found to...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.2CQCh. 39 - A train is approaching yon at very high speed as...Ch. 39 - List three ways our day-to-day lives would change...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.5CQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.6CQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.7CQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.8CQCh. 39 - Give a physical argument that shows it is...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.10CQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.11CQCh. 39 - (i) An object is plated at a position p f from a...Ch. 39 - With regard to reference frames, how does general...Ch. 39 - Two identical clocks are in the same house, one...Ch. 39 - The truck in Figure P39.1 is moving at a speed of...Ch. 39 - In a laboratory frame of reference, an observer...Ch. 39 - The speed of the Earth in its orbit is 29.8 km/s....Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.4PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.5PCh. 39 - A meterstick moving at 0.900c relative to the...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.7PCh. 39 - A muon formed high in the Earths atmosphere is...Ch. 39 - How fast must a meterstick be moving if its length...Ch. 39 - An astronaut is traveling in a space vehicle...Ch. 39 - A physicist drives through a stop light. When he...Ch. 39 - A fellow astronaut passes by you in a spacecraft...Ch. 39 - A deep-space vehicle moves away from the Earth...Ch. 39 - For what value of does = 1.010 0? Observe that...Ch. 39 - A supertrain with a proper length of 100 m travels...Ch. 39 - The average lifetime of a pi meson in its own...Ch. 39 - An astronomer on the Earth observes a meteoroid in...Ch. 39 - A cube of steel has a volume of 1.00 cm3 and mass...Ch. 39 - A spacecraft with a proper length of 300 m passes...Ch. 39 - A spacecraft with a proper length of Lp passes by...Ch. 39 - A light source recedes from an observer with a...Ch. 39 - Review. In 1963, astronaut Gordon Cooper orbited...Ch. 39 - Police radar detects the speed of a car (Fig....Ch. 39 - The identical twins Speedo and Goslo join a...Ch. 39 - An atomic clock moves at 1 000 km/h for 1.00 h as...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.26PCh. 39 - A red light flashes at position xR = 3.00 m and...Ch. 39 - Shannon observes two light pulses to be emitted...Ch. 39 - A moving rod is observed to have a length of =...Ch. 39 - A rod moving with a speed v along the horizontal...Ch. 39 - Keilah, in reference frame S, measures two events...Ch. 39 - Figure P38.21 shows a jet of material (at the...Ch. 39 - An enemy spacecraft moves away from the Earth at a...Ch. 39 - A spacecraft is launched from the surface of the...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.35PCh. 39 - Calculate the momentum of an electron moving with...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.37PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.38PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.39PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.40PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.41PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.42PCh. 39 - An unstable particle at rest spontaneously breaks...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.44PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.45PCh. 39 - Protons in an accelerator at the Fermi National...Ch. 39 - A proton moves at 0.950c. Calculate its (a) rest...Ch. 39 - (a) Find the kinetic energy of a 78.0-kg...Ch. 39 - A proton in a high-energy accelerator moves with a...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.50PCh. 39 - The total energy of a proton is twice its rest...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.52PCh. 39 - When 1.00 g of hydrogen combines with 8.00 g of...Ch. 39 - In a nuclear power plain, the fuel rods last 3 yr...Ch. 39 - The power output of the Sun is 3.85 1026 W. By...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.56PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.57PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.58PCh. 39 - The rest energy of an electron is 0.511 MeV. The...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.60PCh. 39 - A pion at rest (m = 273me) decays to a muon (m =...Ch. 39 - An unstable particle with mass m = 3.34 1027 kg...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.63PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.64PCh. 39 - Review. A global positioning system (GPS)...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.66APCh. 39 - The net nuclear fusion reaction inside the Sun can...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.68APCh. 39 - A Doppler weather radar station broadcasts a pulse...Ch. 39 - An object having mass 900 kg and traveling at...Ch. 39 - An astronaut wishes to visit the Andromeda galaxy,...Ch. 39 - A physics professor on the Earth gives an exam to...Ch. 39 - An interstellar space probe is launched from...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.74APCh. 39 - Prob. 39.75APCh. 39 - An object disintegrates into two fragments. One...Ch. 39 - The cosmic rays of highest energy are protons that...Ch. 39 - Spacecraft I. containing students taking a physics...Ch. 39 - Review. Around the core of a nuclear reactor...Ch. 39 - The motion of a transparent medium influences the...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.81APCh. 39 - Prob. 39.82APCh. 39 - An alien spaceship traveling at 0.600c toward the...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.84APCh. 39 - Prob. 39.85APCh. 39 - An observer in a coasting spacecraft moves toward...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.87APCh. 39 - A particle with electric charge q moves along a...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.89CPCh. 39 - Suppose our Sun is about to explode. In an effort...Ch. 39 - Owen and Dina are at rest in frame S. which is...
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- (a) All but the closest galaxies are receding from our own Milky Way Galaxy. If a galaxy 12.0x109ly away is receding from us at 0.900c, at what velocity relative to us must we send an exploratory probe to approach the other galaxy at 0.990c as measured from that galaxy? (b) How long will it take the probe to reach the other galaxy as measured from Earth? You may assume that the velocity of the other galaxy remains constant. (c) How long will it then take for a radio signal to be beamed back? (All of this is possible in principle, but not practical.)arrow_forwardAn observer in frame S sees lightning simultaneously strike two points 100 m apart. The first strike occurs at x1 = y1 = z1 = t1 = 0 and the second at x2 = 100 m, y2 = z2 = t2 = 0. (a) What are the coordinates of these two events in a frame S moving in the standard configuration at 0.70c relative to S? (b) How far apart are the events in S? (c) Are the events simultaneous in S? If not, what is the difference in time between the events, and which event occurs first?arrow_forwardSuppose the primed and laboratory observers want to measure the length of a rod that rests on the ground horizontally in the space between the helicopter and the tower (Fig. 39.8B). To derive the length transformation L = L (Eq. 39.5), we had to assume that the positions of the two ends were determined simultaneously. What happens to the length transformation equation if both observers measure the end below the helicopter at one time t1 and the other end at a later time t2?arrow_forward
- Suppose an astronaut is moving relative to Earth at a significant fraction of the speed of light. (a) Does he observe the rate of his to have slowed? (b) What change in the rate of earthbound does he see? (c) Does his ship seem to him to shorten? (d) What about the distance between two stars that lie in the direction of his motion? (e) Do he and an earthbound observer agree on his velocity relative to Earth?arrow_forwardAs measured by observers in a reference frame S, a particle having charge q moves with velocity v in a magnetic field B and an electric field E. The resulting force on the particle is then measured to be F = q(E + v × B). Another observer moves along with the charged particle and measures its charge to be q also but measures the electric field to be E′. If both observers are to measure the same force, F, show that E′ = E + v × B.arrow_forwardOwen and Dina are at rest in frame S. which is moving at 0.600c with respect to frame S. They play a game of catch while Ed. at rest in frame S, watches the action (Fig. P39.91). Owen throws the ball to Dina at 0.800c (according to Owen), and their separation (measured in S') is equal to 1.80 1012 m. (a) According to Dina, how fast is the ball moving? (b) According to Dina, what time interval is required for the ball to reach her? According to Ed, (c) how far apart are Owen and Dina, (d) how fast is the ball moving, and (e) what time interval is required for the ball to reach Dina?arrow_forward
- A rod moving with a speed v along the horizontal direction is observed to have length and to make an angle with respect to the horizontal as shown in Figure P38.17. (a) Show that the length of the rod as measured by an observer at rest with respect to the rod is p = [1( v2/c2) cos2 ]1/2. (b) Show that the angle p that the rod makes with the x axis according to an observer at rest with respect to the rod can be found from tan p = tan . These results show that the rod is observed to be both contracted and rotated. (Take the lower end of the rod to be at the origin of the coordinate system in which the rod is at rest.)arrow_forwardConsider an electron moving with speed 0.980c. a. What is the rest mass energy of this electron? b. What is the total energyof this electron? c. What is the kinetic energy of this electron?arrow_forwardA box is cubical with sides of proper lengths L1 = L2 = L3, as shown in Figure P26.14, when viewed in its own rest frame. If this block moves parallel to one of its edges with a speed of 0.80c past an observer, (a) what shape does it appear to have to this observer? (b) What is the length of each side as measured by the observer? Figure P26.14arrow_forward
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