Understanding Relativity: How Moving Objects Experience Near Light Speed Travel

In summary, the conversation discusses the possibility of space travel at near light speeds. While it is currently impossible with our current engineering, it is not theoretically impossible. The discussion also includes potential challenges such as the cosmic microwave background causing a resistance and energy being used for particle production. There is no absolute maximum speed for space travel, as it depends on the specific craft and its engineering. However, there are constraints and challenges to consider, such as the temperature and density of the interstellar medium.
  • #36
PeroK said:
Inverse Compton scattering is not particularly relevant for the limitations on spaceship travel.
Near speed of light? Where is your evidence for that claim? And some hand wavy numbers do not count. They are worth even less than pop science.
 
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  • #37
fresh_42 said:
The assumed speed of the spaceship makes the low energy photons hard (see the Wikipedia quote above).

I read the quote and didn't find enything that supports your claim.

fresh_42 said:
If we can even measure the bow wave of solar winds at the boundary of the heliosphere, then CMB definitely becomes an issue at near c speeds.

That depends on the definition of "near c speeds". At least 0.999999991 c is nowhere near the limit you are talking about.

fresh_42 said:
I provided the contact data of the person who made this claim.

I watched the video and didn't find enything that supports your claim.
 
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  • #38
DrStupid said:
I watched the video and didn't find enything that supports your claim.
Seen, but probably not understood.
0:10
3:50
5:00
5:30-6:30
etc.
 
  • #39
fresh_42 said:
If I had to choose whom I trust more ...

The most important thing that PF tought me is that you can't trust pop-sci sources, no matter who is talking. Even Hawking wrote dobious stuff in his pop-sci books. I would've expected that Mentors know this...
 
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  • #40
weirdoguy said:
The most important thing that PF tought me is that you can't trust pop-sci sources, no matter who is talking. Even Hawking wrote dobious stuff in his pop-sci books. I would've expected that Mentors know this...
I cited a total of 4 sources, 2 of them scientific sources, one an ordinary professor.

And I haven't seen a single reference that they are all wrong. Those who can read have a clear advantage. Sorry, but I really doubt that a spaceship can be accelerated close to c without providing more energy to its own electrons than 5 Joule. However, I would appreciate to see such a calculation. Maybe in the science jokes forum?
 
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  • #41
fresh_42 said:
Sorry, but I really doubt that a spaceship can be accelerated close to c without providing more energy to its own electrons than 5 Joule. However, I would appreciate to see such a calculation. Maybe in the science jokes forum?
##5J## is a lot of energy for an electron.
 
  • #42
fresh_42 said:
Seen, but probably not understood.

You or me?

0:10 - SRT supports interstellar (or even intergalactic) space travel by time dilation and length contraction
3:50 - about CMB
5:00 - blueshift of CMB in front of the ship
5:30-6:30 - pair production if energy is high enough (example: ultra-high-energy cosmic rays)

I still do not see how that supports your claim.
 
  • #43
PeroK said:
##5J## is a lot of energy for an electron.
An entire spaceship accelerated to say .8c, too. The spaceship itself becomes a cosmic ray, not the CMB. This blue shifts to X-ray frequencies. Both together are enough scattering energy for particle production.
 
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  • #44
DrStupid said:
You or me?

0:10 - SRT supports interstellar (or even intergalactic) space travel by time dilation and length contraction
3:50 - about CMB
5:00 - blueshift of CMB in front of the ship
5:30-6:30 - pair production if energy is high enough (example: ultra-high-energy cosmic rays)

I still do not see how that supports your claim.
I'm happy that CERN does. Still better than some guys on the internet. This is getting ridiculous. I want to see the proof of your statement: "CMB is irrelevant for a rocket accelerated to say 0.8c"
 
  • #45
fresh_42 said:
This is wrong, because of relativity. The assumed speed of the spaceship makes the low energy photons hard (see the Wikipedia quote above). If we can even measure the bow wave of solar winds at the boundary of the heliosphere, then CMB definitely becomes an issue at near c speeds. But again: I provided the contact data of the person who made this claim. Send an email and ask the theoretical physicist who made this claim. If I had to choose whom I trust more ...
Sure, if you travel with a speed ##v=\beta c## relative to the restframe of the CMBR the CMBR em. waves propagating directly against the direction of ##v## lead to the (maximal) blue shift of
$$\omega'=\sqrt{\frac{1+\beta}{1-\beta}} \omega.$$
In fact in this direction you observe a black-body spectrum with the correspondingly higher "effective temperature"
$$T_{\text{eff}}'=\sqrt{\frac{1+\beta}{1-\beta}} T,$$
where ##T## is the proper invariant (scalar) temperature measured by a thermometer in the CMBR rest frame. If ##\beta \rightarrow 1## you get arbitrary high temperatures leading to a blue shift of the CMBR to any hard-##\gamma##-ray range you like.

[EDIT: To clarify in view of #46] Of course the quantities with primes refer to what's observed in the space ship's restframe and the unprimed ones refer to the CMBR restframe.
 
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  • #46
fresh_42 said:
The spaceship itself becomes a cosmic ray, not the CMB. This blue shifts to X-ray frequencies. Both together are enough scattering energy for particle production.

You're double counting here. You can't blueshift the CMB and also treat the spaceship itself as a cosmic ray. If you are blueshifting the CMB, then you are working in the spaceship's rest frame, which means the spaceship's kinetic energy is zero. Or if you call the spaceship a cosmic ray, then you are working in the CMB rest frame, which means the CMB temperature is 2.7 K. You have to pick one; you can't take the higher energy value from both.
 
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  • #47
fresh_42 said:
An entire spaceship accelerated to say .8c, too. The spaceship itself becomes a cosmic ray, not the CMB. This blue shifts to X-ray frequencies. Both together are enough scattering energy for particle production.
##0.8c## relative to the comoving frame is not, however, a barrier which a spacecraft could not possibly overcome.
 
  • #48
PeterDonis said:
You're double counting here. You can't blueshift the CMB and also treat the spaceship itself as a cosmic ray. If you are blueshifting the CMB, then you are working in the spaceship's rest frame, which means the spaceship's kinetic energy is zero. Or if you call the spaceship a cosmic ray, then you are working in the CMB rest frame, which means the CMB temperature is 2.7 K. You have to pick one; you can't take the higher energy value from both.
Yeah, that's true. Let's take the protons then. The question remains: How far can we accelerate a massive object before inverse Compton scattering from CMB becomes an issue? My claim is, long before .8c, others say it's irrelevant. CERN says 5 Joule are necessary to start the process. The cosmological background is that we observed hard cosmic rays scattering at CMB. Is there any reason a rocket would make an exception?
 
  • #49
PeroK said:
##0.8c## relative to the CMB is not, however, a barrier which a spacecraft could not possibly overcome.
The hypothesis is, that energy invested in acceleration will be consumed by the production of pions at some stage, and thus not available anymore for further acceleration. The question can only be: where is that barrier? If Lesch is right and there are 400 photons CMB in every cubic centimeter of space, then I only claim that this is enough to become an issue long before c.
 
  • #50
fresh_42 said:
I'm happy that CERN does.

Provide a proper reference.

fresh_42 said:
I want to see the proof of your statement: "CMB is irrelevant for a rocket accelerated to say 0.8c"

Just do the math. With

##\beta = 1 - \varepsilon##

blueshift is

##f' = f \cdot \sqrt {\frac{{1 + \beta }}{{1 - \beta }}} = f \cdot \sqrt {\frac{2}{\varepsilon } - 1} \approx f \cdot \sqrt {\frac{2}{\varepsilon }}##

The maximum of the CMB is at 282 GHz and 0.8 c corresponds to ##\varepsilon = 0.2##. That results in 846 GHz for the maximum of the blueshifted CMB. That means we are talking about IR radiation corresponding to a temperature of 8.6 K. How is that relevant for a rocket?
 
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  • #51
DrStupid said:
Provide a proper reference.
What do you expect? Shall I read it for you? I gave a proper link and the page.
 
  • #52
DrStupid said:
Just do the math. With

##\beta = 1 - \varepsilon##

blueshift is

##f' = f \cdot \sqrt {\frac{{1 + \beta }}{{1 - \beta }}} = f \cdot \sqrt {\frac{2}{\varepsilon } - 1} \approx f \cdot \sqrt {\frac{2}{\varepsilon }}##

The maximum of the CMB is at 282 GHz and 0.8 c corresponds to ##\varepsilon = 0.2##. That results in 846 GHz for the maximum of the blueshifted CMB. That means we are talking about IR radiation corresponding to a temperature of 8.6 K. How is that relevant for a rocket?
The rocket is the issue. We have low energy photons and high energy electrons and protons in that collision.
 
  • #53
fresh_42 said:
5 Joule are necessary to scatter CMB.

5 Joules per particle. Not 5 Joules total. Big difference.
 
  • #54
PeterDonis said:
5 Joules per particle. Not 5 Joules total. Big difference.
Yes. And protons. How fast do they have to be to pass 5J?
 
  • #55
fresh_42 said:
The rocket is the issue. We have low energy photons and high energy electrons and protons in that collision.

But in the rocket rest frame we have low energy electrons and protons and high energy photons. Both frames must give the same answer. And other people are making what look to me like reasonable calculations in the rocket rest frame that say that, for example, at 0.8 c, the CMB looks like infrared radiation--i.e., the kind of stuff that is everywhere in our normal Earth environment and doesn't cause problems for ordinary objects, including spaceships. So I don't think this is such a slam dunk in your favor that you can just dismiss the objections that are being made.
 
  • #57
fresh_42 said:
And protons. How fast do they have to be to pass 5J?

Proton rest mass 936 MeV, or about ##10^9## eV. 5 J = about ##10^{19}## eV. So gamma factor of about ##10^{10}##.
 
  • #58
PeterDonis said:
Proton rest mass 936 MeV, or about ##10^9## eV. 5 J = about ##10^{19}## eV. So gamma factor of about ##10^{10}##.
Inverse Compton was my guess. Lesch argued that we had observed particle scattering at CMB. Given that, the only question remaining is: at which rocket speed? The point is that the energy we have to invest in acceleration grows dramatically, too, and thus there will not be enough energy available once particles are created.
 
  • #59
Of course not. In the reference frame of the spaceship, moving fast enough wrt. the CMBR restframe, there can be CMBR photons, but you need much higher speeds than 0.8 c.

The maximum of the black-body spectrum is at frequencies of
##\nu \simeq T 6 \cdot 10^10 \text{Hz}/\text{K}.##
The threshold for pair production is at photon energies of ##2 m_{\text{e}} \simeq 1 \text{MeV}##. The corresponding frequency is ##\nu=1 \text{MeV}/h \simeq 1.6 \cdot 10^{-16} \text{J}/h \simeq 2.4\cdot 10^{17} \; \text{Hz}##. The temperature where this is at the maximum of the Planck distribution thus is ##T \simeq 4 \cdot 10^6 \; \text{K}##.

Now the CMBR proper temperature is about ##2.75 \text{K}##, i.e., you'd need a blueshift factor of ##\sqrt{(1+\beta)/(1-\beta)} \simeq 1.47##. This gives ##\beta \simeq 1-9.3 \cdot 10^{-13}## ;-).

I hope, I typed everything correctly in my pocket calculator ;-).
 
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  • #60
fresh_42 said:
Inverse Compton was my guess. Lesch argued that we had observed particle scattering at CMB. Given that, the only question remaining is: at which rocket speed? The point is that the energy we have to invest in acceleration grows dramatically, too, and thus there will not be enough energy available once particles are created.
Yes, but as has been repeatedly pointed out, this doesn't stop you getting to Andromeda in about 28 years, for example.

The effects that Lesch is talking about are a) not at speeds that would hinder relativistic space travel; and, b) at speeds where the spacecraft would long since have melted in any case!

There is a case that free particles are eventually slowed below a given threshold relative to the CMB. The distance given was 50 Mpc in the paper you quoted.

Whether this cosmic-ray-speed-limit applies to theoretical space travel is a moot point. But, in any case, a) and b) above apply.
 
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  • #61
fresh_42 said:
What do you expect? Shall I read it for you? I gave a proper link and the page.

I read the referenced pages and didn't find anything that supports your claim. But I at least agree with you that somebody did not understand the references.

fresh_42 said:
The rocket is the issue. We have low energy photons and high energy electrons and protons in that collision.

In the rest frame of the rocket we have IR radiation of an 8.6 K black body as well as protons and electrons almost at rest. We would have a major problem if that could result in pair production.
 
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  • #62
fresh_42 said:
Given that, the only question remaining is: at which rocket speed?

Exactly. And other people have been trying to calculate that. I don't see any justification for you simply dismissing their calculations.

The only number you have given is 5 J; I gave you the gamma factor for 5 J. Have you calculated what relative velocity that equates to? It's certainly not 0.8 c. It's not even the number @vanhees71 gave in post #59; it's even closer to ##1## than that. And the closer to ##1## the relative velocity is, the less relevant it is since it would take a longer and longer trip (assuming constant proper acceleration all the way) for the ship to reach such a high gamma factor.
 
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  • #63
PeterDonis said:
Exactly. And other people have been trying to calculate that. I don't see any justification for you simply dismissing their calculations.
How much energy is necessary to accelerate, say 1 ton of mass from 0.8c to .81c? O.k. I can do the math, but let's assume for a moment, that this is enough to create particles. If there is a possibility of such a creation, then it will take place. As said from the beginning, inverse Compton was a guess of mine which looked plausible. So assumed that this amount of energy is produced somewhere in the ship, then there will be a particle creation, which in return means it cannot be used for acceleration anymore.
 
  • #64
fresh_42 said:
How much energy is necessary to accelerate, say 1 ton of mass from 0.8c to .81c? O.k. I can do the math, but let's assume for a moment, that this is enough to create particles. If there is a possibility of such a creation, then it will take place. As said from the beginning, inverse Compton was a guess of mine which looked plausible. So assumed that this amount of energy is produced somewhere in the ship, then there will be a particle creation, which in return means it cannot be used for acceleration anymore.
Just to give you an idea of the company you are in here:

https://www.physicsforums.com/threa...bject-goes-near-of-the-speed-of-light.982767/

And he ended up writing a crackpot paper overturning SR and GR. Turn back before it's too late :wink:
 
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  • #65
fresh_42 said:
How much energy is necessary to accelerate, say 1 ton of mass from 0.8c to .81c? O.k. I can do the math, but let's assume for a moment, that this is enough to create particles. If there is a possibility of such a creation, then it will take place.

Again, you seem to be confusing total energy with energy per particle. The energy per particle at these speeds is much, much less than that required for particle creation.

If total energy were all that were required, we would have had massive pair production when, for example, the Saturn V rockets were launched to take the Apollo astronauts to the Moon.
 
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  • #66
fresh_42 said:
Still better than some guys on the internet.

You're one of those guys, and I think it's very disrespectfull to treat every single person here that way. Especially ones that showed numerous times that they know what they are talking about.
 
  • #67
weirdoguy said:
You're one of those guys, and I think it's very disrespectfull to treat every single person here that way. Especially ones that showed numerous times that they know what they are talking about.
Yes, Compton seems to be off the table. But I still do not see, that Lesch was wrong. The fact that it was on youtube does not make it wrong per se. He is yet an active ordinary professor in theoretical physics at an ordinary German university. Sorry, but it is in the nature of the question here that sound calculations on this topic are hard to find. If we travel at 0.8c and have a interaction surface of 1 sq.mtr. then we will collide with 96,000,000,000,000,000 photons per second at 0.8c, and this shouldn't create resistance?

(Assuming 400 CMB photons per ##cm^{-3}## is correct.)
 
  • #68
fresh_42 said:
I still do not see, that Lesch was wrong

I don't think anyone is arguing that Lesch was wrong in what he said. I think people are saying that what he said does not support what you are saying.

fresh_42 said:
If we travel at 0.8c and have a interaction surface of 1 sq.mtr. then we will collide with 96,000,000,000,000,000 photons per second at 0.8c, and this shouldn't create resistance?

Radiation pressure should be easy to calculate. But radiation pressure is not what you appear to be talking about.
 
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  • #69
fresh_42 said:
But I still do not see, that Lesch was wrong.

He isn't wrong. What you are reading into that video is wrong.

fresh_42 said:
If we travel at 0.8c and have a interaction surface of 1 sq.mtr. then we will collide with 96,000,000,000,000,000 photons per second at 0.8c, and this shouldn't create resistance?

It creates resistance. But 1 pN/m² radiation pressure is not worth mentioning. If I got the numbers correctly it is 13 orders of magnitude below the drag of the interstellar medium.
 
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  • #70
PeterDonis said:
I don't think anyone is arguing that Lesch was wrong in what he said. I think people are saying that what he said does not support what you are saying.
This is what I actually said:
fresh_42 said:
Reason why it won't work either way: CMB will work as resistor and additional energy meant for acceleration will be turned into particle production instead and arbitrarily close to c will be physically impossible, regardless which engine we constructed.
which is what Lesch said, and my post here was:
fresh_42 said:
It was on a tv show, so no valid reference. At least it was an astronomer who said it. The photons of the CMB are everywhere, so there will be no way to escape them. They make space a fluid with viscosity. Thus depending on mass and surface area we will get a thermodynamic effect. I don't know at which temperature particle production begins, and whether it is pair production, or radioactivity due to collisions with the ship's material, or due to the existing matter in space.

My suspicion: inverse Compton effect.

The closest I could find:
https://arxiv.org/pdf/astro-ph/0106530.pdf

Comments:12 pages, 4 figures, in press
Subjects:Astrophysics (astro-ph)
Journal reference:Astropart.Phys. 17 (2002) 347-354
DOI:10.1016/S0927-6505(01)00156-6
Cite as:arXiv:astro-ph/0106530
And of course, there are no scientific papers of rockets at near c speed.
 
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