Special Relativity (SR) is more general than Newtonian Mechanics (NM), right?
We say that the laws of SR reduce to the laws of NM when (v/c)^2 goes to 0, correct?
But (v/c)^2 = 0 implies that v = 0 (which makes sense, since this is required for the theories to agree exactly).
So how can I formalize the fact that NM is an approximation to SR at small speeds? Is the above good enough just because (v/c)^2 decreases faster than v as v -> 0?
We say that the laws of SR reduce to the laws of NM when (v/c)^2 goes to 0, correct?
But (v/c)^2 = 0 implies that v = 0 (which makes sense, since this is required for the theories to agree exactly).
So how can I formalize the fact that NM is an approximation to SR at small speeds? Is the above good enough just because (v/c)^2 decreases faster than v as v -> 0?
(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-25 11:10 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-26 01:57 am (UTC)So how can I formalize the fact that NM is an approximation to SR at small speeds? Is the above good enough just because (v/c)^2 decreases faster than v as v -> 0?
You show that two theories agree in a limit like this by keep the first non-zero terms in the Taylor expansion for all equations involved. If there is a first-order term which is non-zero and they both agree, then you use that. If the first-order term is zero, then you have to use the second-order term. The first non-zero term is also called the "dominant" term. It controls the behavior for small values of the expansion parameter (in this case, v/c). Does that help?
(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-26 02:51 am (UTC)For example, the famous Einstein equation E = mc^2 is really
E = (1-v^2/c^2)-1/2mc^2 = mc^2 + (1/2)(v/c)^2*mc^2 + O[(v/c)^4]
The first (nonconstant) term simplifies to the familiar (1/2)mv^2 kinetic energy of newtonian mechanics (NM), and so the rigorous statement is "SR is equivalent to NM up to terms of order (v/c)^4". If you want precision in addition to rigor, you can do the "post-newtonian approximation" which entails using the coefficients of the further terms in the taylor expansion.