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Relativistic Mass and Taylor Series: A Physics Problem, Exams of Relativity Theory

The theory of relativity and the formula for calculating the relativistic mass of an object in motion. It includes a problem from a Math 116 exam at the University of Michigan Department of Mathematics in Fall 2005. The problem asks to write the first four nonzero terms of the Taylor series for the relativistic mass formula and interpret the practical significance of the interval of convergence.

Typology: Exams

Pre 2010

Uploaded on 05/11/2023

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9. (11 points) The theory of relativity predicts that when an object moves at speeds close to the
speed of light, the ob ject appears heavier. The apparent, or relativistic, mass m, of the object
when it is moving at speed vis given by the formula
m=m01
v2
c21/2
where cis the speed of light and m0is the mass of the object when it is at rest.
(a) (8 points) Write the first four nonzero terms of the Taylor series for min terms of v. (Hint: You
may want to use the binomial series.)
(b) (3 points) The series you derived in part (a) converges for vin the interval [0,c). Interpret the
practical significance of this interval of convergence in the context of this problem (that is, as far
as the relativistic mass of an object is concerned.)
University of Michigan Department of Mathematics Fall, 2005 Math 116 Exam 2 Problem 9 (relativity)

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  1. (11 points) The theory of relativity predicts that when an object moves at speeds close to the speed of light, the object appears heavier. The apparent, or relativistic, mass m, of the object when it is moving at speed v is given by the formula

m = m 0

v^2 c^2

where c is the speed of light and m 0 is the mass of the object when it is at rest.

(a) (8 points) Write the first four nonzero terms of the Taylor series for m in terms of v. (Hint: You may want to use the binomial series.)

(b) (3 points) The series you derived in part (a) converges for v in the interval [0, c). Interpret the practical significance of this interval of convergence in the context of this problem (that is, as far as the relativistic mass of an object is concerned.)

University of Michigan Department of Mathematics Fall, 2005 Math 116 Exam 2 Problem 9 (relativity)