Special Relativity Terms
Clock
Absolutely any object which marks the passing of time in regular intervals.Speed Of Light
Exactly what it sounds like: the speed at which light particles, called photons, travel. It's universal for any light particle; always equal to
Beta, β
The objective judge that compares an object's speed to the speed of light. Everyone is jealous at how fast a photon can go. Judge Beta makes a fair verdict by dividing velocity v by the speed of light c for comparison purposes. In other words,
Frame Of Reference
The position and speed from which an event is viewed. If we run down an alley with a camcorder on our heads, it records the side of the alley "running" the opposite way. If this same camcorder is fastened on a trashcan in the same all for the same run it videotapes us whizzing past it for a brief amount of time. A thug chasing after us with his own camcorder sees things happening from his angle, with us (hopefully) an unchanging distance in front of him while the sides of the alley rush backward. These are all different frames of references.Inertial Frame Of Reference
A frame of reference describing time and space as if space, such as Mother Earth, is independent of Father Time. All of Newtonian physics happens within an inertial frame. Inertial frames have constant velocities. Acceleration creates a non-inertial frame.Galilean Transformations
Equations that switch from one inertial frame of reference to another.Spacetime Coordinates
Rendezvous coordinates. If we arrange to meet up with a friend somewhere, we agree on a a location and time, given the variable s = (x, y, z, t).Event
Any action or interaction marked with spacetime coordinates.Relativistic
Think of it as relightivistic. It describes anything moving at a significant fraction of the speed of light.Relativistic Factor, γ
Cousins with Judge Beta, Judge Gamma γ compares any property measured in two different frames of references, one of which is moving at a significant fraction of the speed of light,