Infinitatis
Active Member
I've always loved the elegance of physics, but, as I have had no professional instruction in the field, there are many questions that I find difficult to grasp.
Currently, I am having difficulties with understanding special relativity. More specifically, I am having difficulties with understanding how no object, massive or massless, can exceed c, 299792458 m/s. What is so special about this number? Can it be calculated (or have we calculated) it theoretically and not just experimentally?
Another question that I've struggled with involve the idea that time is relative. I understand the concept in general but not with much rigor. I've devised a few thought problems that have helped me understand this partially, but I would like to hear if they are correct, and/or if better thought problems exist:
Let's say that you are watching a baseball game from up above. If you begin moving upward at the speed of light, the baseball game will appear to halt. This occurs because any light that is being reflected off of the players, ball, bat, etc. toward you is no longer fast enough to reach you. You are stuck seeing the light (or frame) that had reflected off of them at the point in time in which you had begun moving at the speed of light because that light is moving as fast as you are. If you moved close to the speed of light, but not at it, the game will appear in slow-motion, because it takes significantly longer for the light (or frames) to reach you. If you were to, hypothetically, travel faster than the speed of light, like a tachyon, the game would appear to "rewind" as you surpass "frames" that had already passed you.
Is this reasoning correct?
What would happen if you were to move at the speed of light toward the baseball field from above? For the very short amount of time that you're traveling, I would imagine that the game would appear to be slightly faster (not noticeably) than it would if you were stationary, since you are seeing "frames" before you would if you were stationary.
Is this reasoning correct? The reason for which I suspect it not to be is that time is supposed to stop if you move at the speed of light, but my reasoning tells me that:
-time stops as you move away from something at the speed of light
-time speeds up very slightly as you move toward something at the speed of light
Furthermore, let's say you have object A traveling at the speed of light in one direction, and object B traveling at the speed of light in the other direction. From the point of view of object A, object B would appear to be stopped, because object A is moving as fast as the light reflecting off of object B. The reverse would appear true for object B.
Is this reasoning correct?
What I don't really understand is how the two object's speeds relative to one another is c, and not 2c. I know that there is the formula for combined velocities (see below), but that doesn't really help me understand the idea conceptually.
Thanks to anyone who is willing to help me understand this.
Currently, I am having difficulties with understanding special relativity. More specifically, I am having difficulties with understanding how no object, massive or massless, can exceed c, 299792458 m/s. What is so special about this number? Can it be calculated (or have we calculated) it theoretically and not just experimentally?
Another question that I've struggled with involve the idea that time is relative. I understand the concept in general but not with much rigor. I've devised a few thought problems that have helped me understand this partially, but I would like to hear if they are correct, and/or if better thought problems exist:
Let's say that you are watching a baseball game from up above. If you begin moving upward at the speed of light, the baseball game will appear to halt. This occurs because any light that is being reflected off of the players, ball, bat, etc. toward you is no longer fast enough to reach you. You are stuck seeing the light (or frame) that had reflected off of them at the point in time in which you had begun moving at the speed of light because that light is moving as fast as you are. If you moved close to the speed of light, but not at it, the game will appear in slow-motion, because it takes significantly longer for the light (or frames) to reach you. If you were to, hypothetically, travel faster than the speed of light, like a tachyon, the game would appear to "rewind" as you surpass "frames" that had already passed you.
Is this reasoning correct?
What would happen if you were to move at the speed of light toward the baseball field from above? For the very short amount of time that you're traveling, I would imagine that the game would appear to be slightly faster (not noticeably) than it would if you were stationary, since you are seeing "frames" before you would if you were stationary.
Is this reasoning correct? The reason for which I suspect it not to be is that time is supposed to stop if you move at the speed of light, but my reasoning tells me that:
-time stops as you move away from something at the speed of light
-time speeds up very slightly as you move toward something at the speed of light
Furthermore, let's say you have object A traveling at the speed of light in one direction, and object B traveling at the speed of light in the other direction. From the point of view of object A, object B would appear to be stopped, because object A is moving as fast as the light reflecting off of object B. The reverse would appear true for object B.
Is this reasoning correct?
What I don't really understand is how the two object's speeds relative to one another is c, and not 2c. I know that there is the formula for combined velocities (see below), but that doesn't really help me understand the idea conceptually.

Thanks to anyone who is willing to help me understand this.
