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by gradschool
2471 days ago
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Not a physicist, but I think it might not be that simple. From our
point of view, a ship with constant 1g acceleration increases its
speed by 9.8 m/s every second, but people on a ship moving at a
significant fraction of c take more than one of our seconds to
experience one of their seconds. During the time they experience one of
their seconds, the speed increases more than 9.8 m/s, so they must
experience greater than 1g acceleration. I haven't done the math but it
would be interesting to work out how the acceleration in our reference
frame needs to reduce to ensure constant acceleration in the ship's
reference frame, and how long it would really take to reach .99c
without squashing the passengers. |
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