| I wondered about that.  The notation I am most familiar is:
                      (delta) t'
(delta) t = ------------------
                sqrt(1 - v^2/c^2)
Obviously, if you multiply both sides by sqrt(1 - v^2/c^2) the quotient
becomes
a product on the other side of the equation.  In your example I didn't know
which frames of reference T and To referred to, so I was afraid to be too
picky.
Shawn
Ronsoave@aol.com wrote:
> In a message dated 99-04-12 13:44:26 EDT, eybdoogy@earthlink.net writes:
>
> > If memory serves me correctly, shouldn't it read:
> >  T = To * sqrt(1 - v^2/c^2)?
>
> Almost full credit!  You're right about the sqrt (it was in there, but the
> equation editor symbol didn't translate to mail); I also forgot the "*"
> should be "/".  Let me know how the LCB works out -- I'm right around the
> corner from ordering one myself.
 |