No, speed is not additive, noticably so at relativistic velocities.if 2 cars travel in opposite directions at .6 the speed of light, are thay traveling at 1.2 the speed of light from each other?
Then it depends on the speed of the mirror on the wall.If they were on opposite facing treadmills, and had wings...
if a bicycle and a car were to travel toward each other, each moving at over half the speed of light, what would be the point of the cyclist wearing hi-viz?
Or a helmet.
(Sounds of mods approaching stage left)
OK. Skip the helmet thing.
Thank you for the explanations.........!
So is there just one answer or does it depend on many variables. I like answers that depend on many factors. It makes it harder for the questioner to tie one down to an answer or to say "wrong".
He means he dosen't know Compo...In more technical language than you may care for in 'Newtonian Mechanics' the frames of references have Galilean Transformations. This means you can add up the 'relative motions' to be whatever you want.
Special Relativity uses something called Lorentz transformations (which was actually around before SR as we know it today, it's just that it was a slight puzzle) where the speed of light cannot be exceeded. Consequences are that a reference frame for different observers may be completely different.
The confusion really arises because the Newtonian is an approximation to SR for low speeds.
The term that mucks it up is called the Lorentz factor. The terms for the two do look not totally dissimilar for the two types of transformations (there are many variants). Instead of x' = x -vt you end up with a γ term in front x' = γ(x-vt) and for time things are a bit more complicated, but not much. The idea being that between the two objects under Galilean transformations the distance/displacement will be different by vt i.e. speed x time = a distance if you're wondering where it comes from. In other words what you'd 'expect'.
And the reasoning for mentioning the names is that you may find it instructive to look them up and find out more.
He means he dosen't know Compo...
no still going at same speedif 2 cars travel in opposite directions at .6 the speed of light, are thay traveling at 1.2 the speed of light from each other?
I'd give it a go Marin, but the conceptual theoretical stuff hurts my brain... that people can discuss and develop these ideas, and understand them, melts my synapses.
I usually take "I was just drinking coffee - you owe me a new computer screen" as a bit of flimflam. Perhaps I should revise my estimation.