Re: The velocity of light going pass a moving train.



"Dono" <sa_ge@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1182389638.183654.71460@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Jun 20, 6:31 pm, "papar...@xxxxxxxxx" <papar...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Forget it. What do you get when you substitute cos(theta_train)=0 into
the relativistic aberration formula?

You get the correct answer as long as you get the sign correct for velocity
and know which angle you are talking about. You really need to make sure
you apply the formulas correctly.


.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: The velocity of light going pass a moving train.
    ... What do you get when you substitute cos=0 into ... the relativistic aberration formula? ... and know which angle you are talking about. ...
    (sci.physics.relativity)
  • Re: The velocity of light going pass a moving train.
    ... What do you get when you substitute cos=0 into ... the relativistic aberration formula? ... and know which angle you are talking about. ... Yes, stubborn cretin. ...
    (sci.physics.relativity)
  • Re: The velocity of light going pass a moving train.
    ... What do you get when you substitute cos=0 into ... the relativistic aberration formula? ... Yes, stubborn cretin. ... I don't need to, fucking arsehole, it you who is applying / interpreting it ...
    (sci.physics.relativity)
  • Re: Trajectory problem pls help
    ... >formulas trying to figure horizontal velocity. ... and the initial velocity with angle from the horizontal. ... Substitute v_x and v_y, and you're left with two equations with two ...
    (sci.physics)

Loading