Janus, on 12 November 2011 - 07:09 PM, said:
2. It is like arguing that rockets won't work in the vacuum of space because they would have nothing to push against. No matter how much you may believe that your argument is correct, the fact that real rockets in the real world do work in space makes it a pointless argument.
3. The second argument trying to link relativistic mass increase and length contraction is just silly. The idea that the density of the mass as viewed from different frames, must remain the same is misguided.
1. "Any number of experiments can not prove that I'm right: one experiment may show that I am wrong ". A. Einstein
2. A rocket is propeled by its own jet engine and not by an external system like protons in accelerators, so the above comparison is wrong.
3. What then is the formula for the increase of relativistic mass density? Does the density of mass can grow in a different proportion than the contraction?
This post has been edited by Bart: 5 December 2011 - 12:53 PM

Help
Sign In »
Register Now!


MultiQuote











