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A cube has a density of 1800 kg/m3 while at rest in the laboratory. What is the cube's density as measured by an experimenter in the laboratory as the cube moves through the laboratory at 91.0 % of the speed of light in a direction perpendicular to one of its faces? You may want to review (Pages 1040 - 1043) .

1 Answer

7 votes

Answer:

4341.44763 kg/m³

Step-by-step explanation:


\rho' = Actual density of cube = 1800 kg/m³


\rho = Density change due to motion

v = Velocity of cube = 0.91c

c = Speed of light =
3* 10^8\ m/s

Relativistic density is given by


\rho=\frac{\rho'}{\sqrt{1-(v^2)/(c^2)}}\\\Rightarrow \rho=\frac{1800}{\sqrt{1-(0.91^2c^2)/(c^2)}}\\\Rightarrow \rho=(1800)/(√(1-0.91^2))\\\Rightarrow \rho=4341.44763\ kg/m^3

The cube's density as measured by an experimenter in the laboratory is 4341.44763 kg/m³

User Marco Ferrari
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