| 31. | :: Which is why so many " funny " effects ( time dilation, length contraction ) happen.
|
| 32. | When we was suggesting Lorentz contraction, I appears that he though length contraction was purely an electromagnetic effect.
|
| 33. | This means time is contracting in this case for him ( so fast even if length contraction is added)
|
| 34. | :3 ) Since the balloon is in motion across the room, it will undergo a relativistic length contraction.
|
| 35. | Direct confirmation of length contraction is hard to achieve in practice since the dimensions of the observed particles are vanishingly small.
|
| 36. | Yes the invariance of speed of light is very strange, because it predicts things like length contraction and time dilation.
|
| 37. | Combining this value for ? with the Kennedy Thorndike null result shows that ? must assume the value of relativistic length contraction.
|
| 38. | Perceptual length contraction and perceptual time dilation result from the same Bayesian observer model, one that expects stimuli to move slowly.
|
| 39. | Nevertheless, the metric construction ( from a non-metric theory ) using the " length contraction " ansatz is criticised.
|
| 40. | Likewise, you can think of the increasing density of the Hubble flow lines near the edge as due to length contraction.
|