Physics, asked by suhelahmed242262, 8 months ago

5. What is the magnitude of relative velocity of objects A and
B moving in the opposite direction?
6. The maximum load of a wire can withstand without
breaking, when its length is reduced to half of its original
length, will
a. be double b. be half c. be four times .d. remain same​

Answers

Answered by panesarh989
0

Answer:

Have you ever driven on a road that seems like it goes on forever? If you look ahead, you might say you have about 10 km left to go. Another traveler might say the road ahead looks like it’s about 15 km long. If you both measured the road, however, you would agree. Traveling at everyday speeds, the distance you both measure would be the same. You will read in this section, however, that this is not true at relativistic speeds. Close to the speed of light, distances measured are not the same when measured by different observers.

Proper Length

One thing all observers agree upon is relative speed. Even though clocks measure different elapsed times for the same process, they still agree that relative speed, which is distance divided by elapsed time, is the same. This implies that distance, too, depends on the observer’s relative motion. If two observers see different times, then they must also see different distances for relative speed to be the same to each of them.

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