Relativistic Rotation 1: Ehrenfest and the Wheel
The first part of the relativistic rotation series, beginning from the Ehrenfest paradox.
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YouTube videos from Imagining Physics.
The first part of the relativistic rotation series, beginning from the Ehrenfest paradox.
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Rotating geometry and the viewpoint of a rotating observer.
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A visual explanation of how objects appear when moving close to light speed.
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A geometric interpretation of the first Bianchi identity.
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A visualization of how spin can be handled in Bohmian mechanics.
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A Bohmian / pilot-wave visualization of the double-slit experiment.
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A relativity-flavoured visualization of de Broglie's wave-particle idea.
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A visualization connected to detecting or noticing gravitational waves.
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Relativistic visual effects in a rotating space station setup.
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Part 3: visualising spacetime geometry with light cones and Lorentz transforms.
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Part 2 of the relativistic aberration series.
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Part 1 of the relativistic aberration series.
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A relativistic paradox visualized with tunnel geometry.
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A short-form/visual explanation connected to apparent superluminal motion.
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A visual exploration of superluminal-looking objects.
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A slow-light visualization of superluminal-looking motion.
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A visual demonstration of relativistic Doppler shift.
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Relativistic flight over Helsinki using a slowed light-speed visualization.
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A slow-speed-of-light style flight visualization.
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A first-person visualization of special relativistic phenomena.
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About Wigner rotation aka Thomas precession.
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A first-person relativistic visualization of how electric and magnetic fields relate between frames.
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A relativistic ray-marching visualization of what an event horizon looks like from an accelerated first-person perspective.
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A shader experiment visualizing a fractal torus construction.
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A visual thought experiment about acceleration and inertial effects.
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Frame dragging and the Lense–Thirring effect visualized.
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A visual investigation of rotating mass and induced angular momentum.
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Follow-up visualization of frame dragging inside a rotating body.
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A visualization of inertial effects and gravitational drag interactions.
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