Time dilation physics?
I have my oral physics GK Abitur in 5 days and I have questions regarding the derivation of time dilation, which is derived using the light clock.
- Why do you only divide v^2 by c^2?
- Where does the t'^2 go and where does the -1 come from?
Positions are marked
you can remove all days with “physics”, “relativity theory”, “time dilatation”, etc… again. the question has nothing to do with physics, it is only about.
from the third to the fourth line each term is divided by c^2 (of course, otherwise it would not be equivalent).
then multiply the clip once and compare it with the line above
I did.
But why is there no c square under t? Was that abbreviated?
Ahsooo. But why do you get the 1?
well-meaning tipp. before you learn for the physics check, you better repeat the elementary fracture bill.
relativity theory you will not need to live in, but if you can’t break it is already a coarser problem. So you better focus on it before.
In an oral examination, “greater” leads are rather irrelevant, but of course you are right.
Before studying, I will generally close all gaps and work hard on them. This is very important to me.