What is Sr: Definition and 479 Discussions

The Lockheed SR-71 "Blackbird" is a long-range, high-altitude, Mach 3+ strategic reconnaissance aircraft developed and manufactured by the American aerospace company Lockheed Corporation. It was operated by both the United States Air Force (USAF) and NASA.The SR-71 was developed as a black project from the Lockheed A-12 reconnaissance aircraft during the 1960s by Lockheed's Skunk Works division. American aerospace engineer Clarence "Kelly" Johnson was responsible for many of the aircraft's innovative concepts. The shape of the SR-71 was based on that of the A-12, which was one of the first aircraft to be designed with a reduced radar cross-section. At one point, a bomber variant of the aircraft was under consideration, before the program was focused solely on reconnaissance. Mission equipment for the reconnaissance role included signals intelligence sensors, a side-looking airborne radar, and a photo camera; the SR-71 was both longer and heavier than the A-12, allowing it to hold more fuel as well as a two-seat cockpit. The SR-71 designation has been attributed to lobbying efforts by USAF Chief of Staff General Curtis LeMay, who preferred the SR (Strategic Reconnaissance) designation over simply RS (Reconnaissance, Strategic). The aircraft was introduced to operational service in January 1966.
During aerial reconnaissance missions, the SR-71 operated at high speeds and altitudes (Mach 3.2 and 85,000 feet, 25,900 meters) to allow it to outrace threats. If a surface-to-air missile launch was detected, the standard evasive action was simply to accelerate and outfly the missile. On average, each SR-71 could fly once per week due to the extended turnaround required after mission recovery. A total of 32 aircraft were built; 12 were lost in accidents with none lost to enemy action. During 1988, the USAF retired the SR-71 largely for political reasons; several were briefly reactivated during the 1990s before their second retirement in 1998. NASA was the final operator of the type, retiring their examples in 1999. Since its retirement, the SR-71's role has been taken up by a combination of reconnaissance satellites and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs); a proposed UAV successor, the SR-72 is under development by Lockheed Martin, and scheduled to fly in 2025. The SR-71 has been given several nicknames, including "Blackbird" and "Habu". As of 2020 the SR-71 continues to hold the official world record it set in 1976 for the fastest air-breathing manned aircraft, previously held by the related Lockheed YF-12.

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  1. J

    What does observer B see in the train thought experiment?

    I am having problems with this presentation of the train thought experiment. I actually think it's incorrect, but I'm not sure. From Ray D'Inverno's book: -- Imagine a train travelling along a straight track with velocity v relative to an observer A on the bank of the track. In the train, B...
  2. V

    Cosmological redshift and photon energy loss in SR

    This might be a tired topic but please help me to understand. Assume a photon moving in vacuum, ignore potential interstellar medium absorption and re-emission since it is not relevant to discussion of space expansion in this context. Redshifted photons will undergo energy loss between *right...
  3. Fredrik

    Lagrangian/Hamiltonian for classical point particles in SR

    Anyone know a good place to read about the Lagrangian or Hamiltonian approach to the equations of motion of classical point particles in Minkowski spacetime? It doesn't have to go very deep into it, but it should at least include a discussion of symmetries and conserved quantities.
  4. thenewmans

    No info transferred means SR and Entanglement do not conflict

    How is it that the lack of any info transferred between 2 entangled particles means that SR and Entanglement are not in conflict? I guess what I’m really asking is, well, it sounds to me like the lack of info is really just a lack of evidence that anything is transferred instantaneously. So if...
  5. grav-universe

    SR derived solely from one postulate

    The two postulates of SR are: 1) the laws of physics are the same in every inertial frame 2) light is measured traveling isotropically at c in every inertial frame I intend to derive SR by applying only the second postulate alone, that the speed of light is measured isotropically at c in...
  6. C

    SR time dilation real or perceived

    I have a simple question. If we put a clock in a satellite in orbit for some amount of time, and then brought it back to earth, will the clock's reading of time passed be less than a clock on Earth's measured passed time. *(This is strictly ignoring any general relativistic time dilation!) In...
  7. M

    STRACT: Inertial Frames in Special and General Relativity

    How are inertial frames defined in Special and General Relativity? In Newtonian physics, an inertial frame is usually defined as one in which N2 holds. Clearly this cannot be the same definition as for SR. In GR an inertial frame is one in which SR holds (I think). However, there is now a...
  8. R

    Particle Traveling in a Uniform Magnetic Field (SR?)

    Let a particle mass m charge q be placed in a uniform magnetic field \vec B = B\hat k with an initial velocity v_0\hat i Clearly, it will enter a circular path of radius so and so with angular frequency so and so. But, it will not move in a straight line, not at all. Its momentum will...
  9. J

    A simple SR question, but confusing to me

    three spaceships, two moving at 0.9C and the 3rd stationary relative to the first two. the two moving ships are 1 LY apart but moving in the same direction toward the 3rd ship. as the first of the two moving ships passes the 3rd (stationary) ship, the ship which is now 1 LY from both the other...
  10. T

    What Does "sr" Stand For in Cosmic Ray Flux Units?

    the unit of cosmic ray flux is expressed as flux /(m^2.sr.s.GeV), so what does sr stand for? Thanks.
  11. S

    What is the law of reflection in special relativity?

    Hi, I'm working through an Excercise in Sean Carrol's spacetime and geometry book. The question asks you to consider an inertial frame S with coordinates x^\mu=(t,x,y,z) and a frame S' with primed coordinates. Which is related to S by a boost v in the y direction. Imagine a wall( or mirror)...
  12. M

    Does c-invariance in SR postulate need inertial frames ?

    2 textbooks I have give postulate 2 of SR as: "The speed of light in vacuum is constant in all inertial reference frames". But "Classical Dynamics" by Jerry B. Marion has: "The velocity of light in free space is a universal constant independent of any relative motion of the source and...
  13. LarryS

    Can the SR Concept of Reference Frames be Applied to Quantum Mechanics?

    SR "Reference Frames" in QM ? The SR concept of “Reference Frame” cannot be transferred to the micro-world of QM because, due to the HUP, space and time are blurry in that world. Comments? (Thanks in advance).
  14. V

    Invariant Tensors in GR and SR

    Hello all, this is my first post on this forum, though I have been perusing it for a while. I am currently re-reading through Carroll's text on SR and there is a curious comment on p24 that intrigues me. Carroll says that the *only* tensors in SR which are invariant are the Kronecker delta...
  15. D

    Inverse Compton scattering in SR

    This is actually for a graduate course but it's a basic special relativity problem, i.e. undergraduate-level material, so I'm posting it here... Homework Statement Homework Equations U^{\mu} = (1, 0, 0, 0) (in the observer's rest frame) V^{\mu} = (\gamma, \gamma \vec{v}) P^{\mu} =...
  16. haushofer

    SR and GR in a medium, gravitational waves

    A little question which I thought of today. I thought about what happened in a medium with Lorentz transformation. With a refraction index n, the speed of light is altered to c/n. However, as far as I can see now this shouldn't influence the Lorentztransformations, right? It's tempting to put...
  17. S

    Introduction to SR: Inertial Frame of Reference Explained

    Hey guys can someone explain to me what does an inertial frame of refence mean? From what i know its a frame of reference whereby the observer frame of reference is at constant velocity? But i don't really get what it means. I have been reading some articles on SR and it seems that there is...
  18. A

    Confused by an example in Brian Greene's book and SR in general

    Hi there. I've been reading Brian Greene's book "An Elegant Universe" for the sake of curiosity and one of his examples to demonstrate special relativity really confuses me about the entire concept. To start, this is my current understanding of SR, so please correct me if I am wrong: -The...
  19. G

    Is It Possible to Integrate General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics?

    Gravity seems to squish space time, velocity seems to also. It seems that through each's affect on distance, a formula containing both could possibly exist. Also, if we stopped and considered GR a law instead of a theory for a moment, then we conclude singularities must not exist. And QM...
  20. S

    Help Understand SR - Steve's Questions

    Hi everyone, I recently decided that I wanted to the understand the concepts and applications of SR better. I've been reading a lot about it, but it gets confusing at points. For now I'm only concerned with SR and not GR. Here are some examples that I'm sure many of you would find trivial...
  21. N

    No SR time dilation without Lorentz contraction

    My understanding is that SR time dilation and Lorentz contraction are flip sides of the same coin. The two always occur together, never separately. That is implicit in spacetime diagrams. I think this duality requirement is necessary so that light always travels at the speed of c in every...
  22. C

    Experience Zero-Gravity at Earth's Core

    Imagine you were safely enchambered right at the center of the earth. Here you would "experience" strong gravitational "forces" but since they all point in opposite directions you would float around as if you were in zero-gravity. My question is, whether you would experience time dilation or...
  23. N

    SR and classical Doppler shift

    Alice and Bob are each in their own spaceship, and are traveling radially, initially away from each other, and subsequently toward each other, at some highly relativistic relative speed, say 99c. Each ship emits light flashes toward the other. Alice observes the light from Bob's outbound...
  24. E

    Understanding SR: A Travelling Observer & Photons

    I am currently trying to understand SR and am confused on this postulate. Lets say somone is traveling on a some kind of machine that emits photons. When that photon is emited will the person traveling on the machine measure the photon going c or will they measure it going c-v? My next...
  25. N

    Exploring the Impact of FRW Coordinates on SR Effects in Cosmology

    In hypothetical empty space, Bob stays home and Alice flies radially away from home at .9c. In the flat Minkowski coordinates, each determines that the other's clock is running slower than their own. Each determines that the radial distance between them is Lorentz-contracted. Now consider...
  26. I

    How Does Moving with Velocity Affect Charge and Current Densities?

    Homework Statement The planes x= ±a are charged to uniform surface density ±σ respectively. Find the charge and current densities in a frame moving with velocity (0,v,0) - [done] Find also the electromagnetic field in the moving frame by solving the problem in the moving frame...
  27. L

    Question about SR and increasing mass

    Let's say you're on a spaceship and you can accelerate to a speed very close to c. As your own time seems to slow down (relative to slow moving observers), your mass also increases. I know that mass increases in the sense that one requires more energy to give the same acceleration, but does...
  28. N

    Are proper travel distances contracted by SR?

    Imagine a hypothetical large region of empty, non-expanding space whose spacetime is flat. At the start of the scenario, a rocket sits stationary relative to our galaxy at a large proper distance "x", in the common inertial frame. Then at t=0 the rocket quickly accelerates to a constant .99c...
  29. rjbeery

    Exploring the EPR Paradox: Reconciling QM and SR

    Greetings! This is my first post so go easy. I read through the thread addressing the Sci Am article claiming that entanglement violates relativity. The article actually addresses a symptom of a larger issue that exists between QM and SR. I would like to get feedback on this issue as...
  30. T

    Combining SR and GR time dilation

    Just seeking a bit of guidance if I may ? If Lambda 1 is the time dilation caused by a gravitational field (ie proper time outside field/proper time inside field for static observers), and Lambda 2 is the usual time dilation under special relativity for a moving body (both lambda's >= 1), how...
  31. M

    SR problem in book seems to be faulty

    Homework Statement The problem in question is 11.10 of "A traveler's guide to spacetime" by Moore. It goes as follows (by the way, the unit of distance that is used in the book is the lightsecond): "A neutral boson of mass m traveling with v=4/5 in the +x direction strikes a snoozon of mass...
  32. W

    SR Inertial Frame Scenario Confusion

    I'm new to the study of SR and GR. I have a question that I have not been able to find any discussion about. In the case of two frames of reference where we are comparing events from the point of view between a 'stationary frame' (inertial) to an excelerating frame like the twin paradox is...
  33. N

    Does Defining a Four-Dimensional Velocity Vector Make Sense for Time Dilation?

    When looking at time dilation, I once came across a piece (I don't remember where) that said you could view time dilation as follows. Everything moves through four-dimensional spacetime at a constant velocity c. Something stationary is only moving in the time dimension. Something that has a...
  34. S

    Angle of reflection with moving mirror, SR

    Homework Statement A mirror moves perpendicular to its plane with speed (beta)c. A light ray is incident on the mirror from the \forward" direction (i.e., vm dot vl < 0, where vm is the mirror's 3-velocity and vl is the light ray's 3-velocity) with incident angle µ (measured with respect to...
  35. N

    SR is that nothing can move faster than light

    Can somebody explain my error to me? 1. The base of SR is that nothing can move faster than light, c + v == c, c - v = c 2 The next step many authors do is proving non-existance of simultaneity by on observer at the platform versus one in a fast train. Flash from the front, to...
  36. J

    How Does Uniform Acceleration Affect Time Perception in Special Relativity?

    I have some questions ion on Uniform Acceleration in SR, inspired by exercise 19 c) in Chapter 2 of Schutz, A First Course in General Relativity. Here is the exercise: A body is uniformly accelerated \[ a = 10m/s^2 \] . Find the elapsed proper time for the body as a function of...
  37. A

    Is 2nd postulate of SR necessary?

    D.J. Griffiths in his "Introduction to Electrodynamics" writes: "Some authers consider Einstein's second postulate redundant - no more than a special case of the first. They maintain that the very existence of ether would violate the principle of relativity, in the sense that it would define...
  38. M

    SR & Accelerations: Do You & I Have Same Proper Time?

    An inertial observer in reference frame S makes the following determinations about you and me. (By that I mean all values below are with respect to the inertial observer.) You: Position (x, y, z) = ( 0, 0, 0) Velocity (vx, vy, vz) = ( 0, 0, 0) Acceleration (ax, ay, az)...
  39. thenewmans

    What contradictions remain between SR and QM?

    In your view, what contradictions remain? My guess is some might say none since entanglement can’t be used for FTL communication. Still others might say something (wave collapse and such) goes nondeterministic (FTL or back in time) between entangled particles so there is still a conflict. I’m...
  40. H

    Few concepts that I miss in SR

    Hi, Could you explain me a few things I still don't get about special relativity ? I've been tought a few years ago that special relativity wasn't good for handling accelerations... well I've been reading books and a few topics here, and I'm now convinced it is not true... for exactly the...
  41. F

    Heuristic explanation of why quantum mechanics plus SR imply antiparticles

    heuristic explanation of why quantum field theory imply antiparticles I'm looking for a heuristic explanation of why quantum mechanics plus special relativity requires antiparticles, Does anybody want to take a crack at it? Or am I asking for the impossible?
  42. N

    SR Doppler Redshift & SR Time Dilation

    Light sources A & B begin at the same location. Then, source A begins moving directly (and soon inertially) away from Observer at 0.8c, while source B begins moving directly (and soon inertially) toward Observer at 0.8c. SR Doppler redshift causes the light received by Observer from A to be...
  43. I

    Combined time dilation due to SR and GR

    Homework Statement A cosmonaut spends a few years in an orbit above the Earth. We would like to estimate how his age will differ from his age if he had stayed on Earth. We will consider two separate effects. (a) First calculate the effect due to time dilation from Special Relativity. Let...
  44. S

    How to calculate relative velocity in SR

    I assume that, in SR, both observers moving relative to each other calculate the same relative velocity (v). But I wonder how. If they use clocks and rods, I see two possible methods: (a) combination of the measurements of two frames and (b) only "home-made" measurements. In method (a), Mr A...
  45. C

    Understanding Extra Internal Degree of Freedom from QM and SR

    I've been trying to understand something for the past few days but can't seem to get my head around it. Could someone please explain to me how an extra internal degree of freedom arises for a particle when special relativity is combined with quantum mechanics?
  46. S

    Solve SR Latch Problem: Draw NAND Gates, Derive Table, Show Timing

    -NOTE: I figured the problem out. Please ignore. Draw a similar latch using NAND gates (from one using NOR gates). Derive its characteristic table and show its timing diagram, given the R and S inputs. S R Qa Qb ------------ 0 0 0/1 1/0 (no change) 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1...
  47. C

    Thought Experiment: Spaceship, Photon, and Relativity Explained in Simple Terms

    I was thinking of this thought experiment the other day and it didnt quite seem to make sense to me. I hope some of you can explain it. I have drawn a quick example of the setup: and sorry for my english (c = 1 m/s) Imagine a 1 meter long spaceship with a velocity of 0,5 m/s (c/2). The...
  48. A

    SR and Light Clocks - Confused

    Hello all. I wonder if you could help explain something to me. No matter how much I read I am not sure if my understanding of special relativity is correct. My confusion is with respect to a light clock constructed as one mirror above the other and a photon reflecting between the two mirrors...
  49. zimo

    Another energy and momentum SR problem

    Homework Statement A 100kev photon scatters from a free electron initially at res. Find the recoil velocity of the electron if the photon scattering angle is 180 degrees. Homework Equations Conservation of Energy, Conservation of Momentum (It is not allowed to use Compton's effect...
  50. C

    Solve Equal & Opposite Velocities for Two Particles in Relative Frames

    Homework Statement In frame S , particle 1 is at rest and particle 2 is moving to the right with velocity v. Consider frame S ′ , moving relative to S , with speed u. Find the value of u such that the two particles appear in S ′ to be approaching each other with equal but opposite...
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