ETIMOLOGÍA DE LA PALABRA FITZGERALD-LORENTZ CONTRACTION
Named after G. F. Fitzgerald (1851–1901), Irish physicist, and H. A. Lorentz.
QUÉ SIGNIFICA FITZGERALD-LORENTZ CONTRACTION EN INGLÉS
Contracción de la longitud
En física, la contracción de longitud es el fenómeno de una disminución de la longitud medida por el observador de un objeto que se desplaza a cualquier velocidad distinta de cero con respecto al observador. Esta contracción es usualmente sólo perceptible en una fracción sustancial de la velocidad de la luz. La contracción de la longitud es sólo en la dirección paralela a la dirección en la que el cuerpo observado está viajando. Este efecto es insignificante a velocidades diarias, y puede ser ignorado para todos los propósitos regulares. Sólo a mayor velocidad se hace relevante. A una velocidad de 13.400.000 m / s, la longitud contraída es del 99,9% de la longitud en reposo; A una velocidad de 42.300.000 m / s, la longitud es todavía del 99%. A medida que la magnitud de la velocidad se aproxima a la velocidad de la luz, el efecto se hace dominante, como puede verse por la fórmula: donde L0 es la longitud apropiada, L es la longitud observada por un observador en movimiento relativo con respecto al objeto, v Es la velocidad relativa entre el observador y el objeto en movimiento, c es la velocidad de la luz, y el factor de Lorentz, γ, se define como.
definición de Fitzgerald-Lorentz contraction en el diccionario inglés
La definición de contracción de Fitzgerald-Lorentz en el diccionario es la contracción que exhibe un cuerpo en movimiento cuando su velocidad se aproxima a la de la luz.
PALABRAS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADAS CON «FITZGERALD-LORENTZ CONTRACTION»
Fitzgerald-Lorentz contraction ·
fitzgerald ·
lorentz ·
contraction ·
physics ·
length ·
phenomenon ·
decrease ·
measured ·
observer ·
object ·
which ·
traveling ·
zero ·
velocity ·
relative ·
this ·
usually ·
only ·
noticeable ·
substantial ·
fraction ·
speed ·
light ·
direction ·
arxiv ·
isis ·
part ·
john ·
bell ·
george ·
francis ·
lecture ·
abridged ·
denis ·
relativity ·
quantum ·
theory ·
paper ·
reviews ·
former ·
contentions ·
writer ·
that ·
realm ·
classical ·
rate ·
michelson ·
morley ·
experiment ·
illusory ·
casa ·
space ·
station ·
rocket ·
enters ·
long ·
inside ·
bays ·
international ·
download ·
philsci ·
archive ·
university ·
pittsburgh ·
known ·
hypothesis ·
rather ·
precur ·
cornerstone ·
kinematic ·
falsity ·
jstor ·
proposed ·
explanation ·
result ·
fails ·
account ·
kennedy ·
thorndike ·
define ·
exhibits ·
when ·
close ·
also ·
called ·
wordreference ·
fɪtsˈdʒɛrəldlɔːˈrɛnts ·
etymology ·
redirected ·
found ·
want ·
thank ·
interciencia ·
apparent ·
introduction ·
optical ·
device ·
figure ·
each ·
reflected ·
follows ·
different ·
trajectory ·
wards ·
answers ·
special ·
hendrik ·
antoon ·
dutch ·
theoretical ·
physicist ·
year ·
science ·
technology ·
role ·
development ·
joseph ·
larmor ·
electronic ·
matter ·
andrew ·
warwick ·
show ·
10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «FITZGERALD-LORENTZ CONTRACTION»
Descubre el uso de
Fitzgerald-Lorentz contraction en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
Fitzgerald-Lorentz contraction y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
Einstein's Mistakes: The Human Failings of Genius
... cannot be calculated from the atomic structure by means of newtonian
mechanics, but only by quantum mechanics—and that had not yet been invented.
the contraction became known as the fitzgerald-lorentz contraction, and it is
celebrated ...
2
John S. Bell on the Foundations of Quantum Mechanics
cal Problems of Space and Time Griinbaum has a section entitled "The principle
of the constancy of the speed of light and the falsity of the ether theoretic
FitzGerald- Lorentz contraction hypothesis". And from the works of scientists and
...
J. S. Bell, Mary Bell, Kurt Gottfried,
2001
... frame, which requires the use of synchronised clocks (clocks which have been
set so that they agree on time readings) at x2 and x1, then t2 = t1 = t and we can
write Thus Figure 9.4 The Fitzgerald-Lorentz contraction of a ruler which is. Thus
...
Michael Mansfield, Colm O'Sullivan,
2012
4
The Origins of Vīraśaiva Sects: A Typological Analysis of ...
FitzGerald-Lorentz Contraction In 1892, George Francis FitzGerald proposed a
hypothesis. He postulated one-dimensional contraction of any object in the
direction of its motion, which contraction increased with the increase of its velocity
.
5
Proceedings of the Second Meeting on CPT and
Lorentz ...
Discretization length scales and/or non-commutativity length scales naturally end
up acquiring different values for different inertial observers, just as one would
expect in light of the mechanism of FitzGerald-Lorentz contraction. There are also
...
... is largely because of this reference that the effect has become known as the "
FitzGerald-Lorentz contraction."72 What does this account of the origin of
FitzGerald's contraction hypothesis tell us, not just about the evolution of an
important ...
7
Lorentz and Poincaré Invariance: 100 Years of Relativity
However, it should be emphasized that the concept of FitzGerald and Lorentz
contradicts the fundamental principle of relativity because the FitzGerald-Lorentz
contraction is absolute, while the Lorentz contraction in Einstein's theory is
relative.
Jong-Ping Hsu, Yuan-Zhong Zhang, Yuanzhong Zhang,
2001
8
The Indispensability of Mathematics
3.3.3 The FitzGerald-Lorentz Contraction The special theory of relativity tells us,
amongst other things, that a body in motion, relative to some inertial reference
frame T , suffers a FitzGerald- Lorentz contraction. This is a reduction in the
length ...
School of Philosophy University of Tasmania Mark Colyvan Lecturer,
2001
9
Einstein, the Aether and Variable Rest Mass
The FitzGerald-Lorentz contraction But at the time, the theory appeared to have
one difficulty – it was incompetent, as originally presented, to explain the
negative result of the Michelson-Morley experiment. The adjustment required
was ...
10
Introduction to Electrodynamics
... z[(t) instead of z'2(t') — z[(t'). It is the latter difference which is L and not the first.
The same sort of 12.4: The Fitzgerald-Lorentz Contraction and Time Dilation 391
The Fitzgerald-Lorentz Contraction and Time Dilation.
Anton Z. Capri, P. V. Panat,
2002