From: Xela@yabbs To: JasonLee@yabbs Subject: warp speed dude... Date: Mon Mar 7 22:02:28 1994 Because of experiments in the late 1800's, it was found that the speed of light is independent of the velocity of the instrument measuring it. So if a spaceship travels away from the sun at 100,000 mps (miles per second) and measures the speed of light...the result would be the familiar old value of 186,000 mps and *not* 86,000 mps. So Einstein came up with a way of relating changing coordinate systems in "space-time." It's known today as his special theory of relativity. So I'll start off with some definitions are work from there: 1) We have two nonaccelerating coordinate systems S and S' in three-space (R^3, or 3-D). Because there is no acceleration, S' moves at a constant velocity relative to S. 2)The corresponding axes of S and S' (x,x',y,y',z, and z') are parallel. The origin of S' moves in the positive direction along the x-axis of S, at a constant velocity v > 0 relative to S. 3)Two clocks C and C' are placed in space. C is placed stationary relative to S, and C' placed stationary relative to S'. The time unit is in seconds. At the point where the origins of S and S' are the same, the clocks both read zero. 4)The unit of length is the light second (the distance light travels in one second). So the speed of light (in respect to these units) is one light second per second. Because I'll need to use some matrix stuff, a column vector will be written as [x1,x2,...,xn]; each component separated by a comma.