Search results for "Special Relativity"

showing 10 items of 60 documents

The effect of body posture on long range time-to-contact estimation

2011

On Earth, gravity accelerates freely moving objects downward, whereas upward-moving objects are being decelerated. Do humans take internalised knowledge of gravity into account when estimating time-to-contact (TTC, the time remaining before the moving object reaches the observer)? To answer this question, we created a motion-prediction task in which participants saw the initial part of an object's trajectory moving on a collision course prior to an occlusion. Observers had to judge when the object would make contact with them. The visual scene was presented with a head-mounted display. Participants lay either supine (looking up) or prone (looking down), suggestive of the ball either rising…

MaleSupine positionComputer scienceMotion PerceptionTime to contactExperimental and Cognitive Psychology050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesJudgmentUser-Computer InterfaceYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineArtificial IntelligenceOrientationImmediacyOcclusionProne PositionSupine PositionHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesComputer visionCommunicationDepth Perception[SDV.NEU.PC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Psychology and behaviorbusiness.industryBody posture05 social sciencesCOMPORTEMENT DU CONDUCTEURObserver (special relativity)CollisionSensory SystemsOphthalmologyPattern Recognition VisualTime PerceptionFemaleArtificial intelligencebusinessPerceptual Masking030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGravitation
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A teaching proposal for the didactics of Special Relativity: the spacetime globe

2022

Abstract Special Relativity introduces students to Modern Physics, whose importance in the high school is increasing. Nevertheless its teaching and learning is a critical issue. Different solutions have been developed to overcome the encountered difficulties. In this paper we describe the spacetime globe, a mechanical instrument that allows to experience Special Relativity hands-on. We show how it is possible to treat all the main phenomena foreseen by Special Relativity with simple laboratory experiences, using the idea of Minkowski’s spacetime diagrams. The aim is to develop the use of geometrical approach in learning Special Relativity in high schools.

Minkowski’s diagramSpecial RelativityEinsteinian physics educationSettore FIS/08 - Didattica E Storia Della Fisicasecondary educationEinstein; Einsteinian physics education; Minkowski's diagrams; secondary education; spacetime; Special RelativityGeneral Physics and AstronomyEinsteinMinkowski's diagramsspacetimeEducation
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2015

We examined the effects of spatial frequency similarity and dissimilarity on human contour integration under various conditions of uncertainty. Participants performed a temporal 2AFC contour detection task. Spatial frequency jitter up to 3.0 octaves was applied either to background elements, or to contour and background elements, or to none of both. Results converge on four major findings. (1) Contours defined by spatial frequency similarity alone are only scarcely visible, suggesting the absence of specialized cortical routines for shape detection based on spatial frequency similarity. (2) When orientation collinearity and spatial frequency similarity are combined along a contour, performa…

Multidisciplinarygenetic structuresbusiness.industryPattern recognitionObserver (special relativity)CollinearityMethods of contour integrationLuminanceForm perceptionPsychophysicsArtificial intelligenceSpatial frequencybusinessMathematicsJitterPLOS ONE
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Reliable extraction of the dB(E1)/dE for 11Be from its breakup at 520 MeV/nucleon

2019

We analyze the breakup of the one-neutron halo nucleus 11Be measured at 520 MeV/nucleon at GSI on Pb and C targets within an eikonal description of the reaction including a proper treatment of special relativity. The Coulomb term of the projectile-target interaction is corrected at first order, while its nuclear part is described at the optical limit approximation. Good agreement with the data is obtained using a description of 11Be, which fits the breakup data of RIKEN. This solves the apparent discrepancy between the dB(E1)/dE estimations from GSI and RIKEN for this nucleus.

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsRelativistic correctionNuclear TheoryNuclear TheoryFOS: Physical sciencesHalo nucleusSpecial relativityOne-neutron halo nucleidB(E1)/dENuclear breakup01 natural sciencesNuclear physicsNuclear Theory (nucl-th)Eikonal model0103 physical sciencesCoulombmedicineCoulomb breakup010306 general physicsNuclear ExperimentPhysics010308 nuclear & particles physicsEikonal equationBreakupPhysique atomique et nucléairelcsh:QC1-999medicine.anatomical_structureProper treatmentPhysics::Accelerator PhysicsNucleonNucleuslcsh:PhysicsPhysics Letters B
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Measurements of relativistic time dilatation for positive and negative muons in a circular orbit

1977

The lifetimes of both positive and negative relativistic (γ = 29.33) muons have been measured in the CERN Muon Storage Ring with the results τ+ = 64.419 (58) µs, τ− = 64.368 (29) µs The value for positive muons is in accordance with special relativity and the measured lifetime at rest: the Einstein time dilation factor agrees with experiment with a fractional error of 2×10−3 at 95% confidence. Assuming special relativity, the mean proper lifetime for μ− is found to be τ0− = 2.1948(10) µs the most accurate value reported to date. The agreement of this value with previously measured values of τ0+ confirms CPT invariance for the weak interaction in muon decay.

Nuclear physicsPhysicsParticle physicsMultidisciplinaryMuonCPT symmetryTime dilation of moving particlesHigh Energy Physics::ExperimentTime dilationCircular orbitSpecial relativityWeak interactionStorage ringNature
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Test of Special Relativity in a Heavy Ion Storage Ring

2008

Nuclear physicsPhysicsTheoretical physicsLaser noiseOptical distortionHeavy ionAtomic physicsSpecial relativity (alternative formulations)Laser beamsStorage ringEQEC 96 1996 European Quantum Electronic Conference EQEC-96
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Improved test of time dilation in special relativity.

2003

An improved test of time dilation in special relativity has been performed using laser spectroscopy on fast ions at the heavy-ion storage-ring TSR in Heidelberg. The Doppler-shifted frequencies of a two-level transition in 7 Li + ions at v = 0.064c have been measured in the forward and backward direction to an accuracy of Δν/ν = 1 × 10 - 9 using collinear saturation spectroscopy. The result confirms the relativistic Doppler formula and sets a new limit of 2.2 × 10 - 7 for deviations from the time dilation factor γ S R = (1 - ν 2 /c 2 ) - 1 / 2 .

PhysicsGeneral Physics and AstronomySpecial relativity (alternative formulations)Ionsymbols.namesakeQuantum mechanicsIves–Stilwell experimentSaturation (graph theory)symbolsTime dilationLimit (mathematics)Atomic physicsSpectroscopyDoppler effectPhysical review letters
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Mirror, Mirror on the Wall

2014

Our man stands with his face turned towards bygone times. He must spin around to catch a glimpse of the new days waiting to rise. The tornithologist has also arrived at the very essence of his own being, the point of embarkation, from which he can set off in search of the roots of each present moment. For the Torni, being a tower involves a twin-layered perceptual dimension. The height of the tower allows views to far-off places. From the top the gaze of an observer can pick out distant landscapes. Rising into the heavens also means standing out from one’s surroundings and this makes it impossible for a tower to conceal itself. In other words, it is gazed from and gazed upon. Even though th…

PhysicsHistoryMirror imagebusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectObserver (special relativity)Tower (mathematics)GazeOpticsMixed drinkAestheticsPerceptionbusinessSet (psychology)Simple (philosophy)media_common
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A note on the computation of geometrically defined relative velocities

2011

We discuss some aspects about the computation of kinematic, spectroscopic, Fermi and astrometric relative velocities that are geometrically defined in general relativity. Mainly, we state that kinematic and spectroscopic relative velocities only depend on the 4-velocities of the observer and the test particle, unlike Fermi and astrometric relative velocities, that also depend on the acceleration of the observer and the corresponding relative position of the test particle, but only at the event of observation and not around it, as it would be deduced, in principle, from the definition of these velocities. Finally, we propose an open problem in general relativity that consists on finding intr…

PhysicsMathematics - Differential GeometryPhysics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)General relativityComputationOpen problemRelative velocityFOS: Physical sciences83C99 53B30Observer (special relativity)KinematicsGeneral Relativity and Quantum Cosmology (gr-qc)General Relativity and Quantum CosmologyClassical mechanicsDifferential Geometry (math.DG)FOS: MathematicsTest particleAstrophysics::Galaxy AstrophysicsFermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope
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Newtonian and relativistic emission coordinates

2009

Emission coordinates are those generated by positioning systems. Positioning systems are physical systems constituted by four emitters broadcasting their respective times by means of sound or light signals. We analyze the incidence of the space-time causal structure on the construction of emission coordinates. The Newtonian case of four emitters at rest is analyzed and contrasted with the corresponding situation in special relativity.

PhysicsNuclear and High Energy Physicssymbols.namesakeTheory of relativityClassical mechanicsLagrangian mechanicssymbolsRelativistic mechanicsRelativistic aberrationSpecial relativityAction-angle coordinatesIntroduction to the mathematics of general relativityTests of special relativityPhysical Review D
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