Physics for beginners/10-a puzzling inconsistency

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File:Physics for beginners-10-a puzzling inconstistency.pdf
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Study this diagram carefully and you will see why Galileo and others assumed that observed velocitys add: The 40km/hr (kilometers/hour) train is shown at two different times, at 1PM to the left, and 40km away at 2PM when it is near a different clock (no timezones have been crossed!).

The man runs on top of the train at 10km/hr. It seems reasonable to infer that the man has moved 50km in one hour (i.e., 50km/hr). This true only to the extent that the train is moving much slower than the speed of light (light moves about a million (106) times faster than sound.

Mathematically, this model for relative motion is the equation:

vME50 km/h=vMT10 km/h+vTE40 km/h,

where:

vME is the velocity of the Man relative to Earth,
vMT is the velocity of the Man relative to the Train,
vTE is the velocity of the Train relative to Earth.



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