Observer on earth sees a ship travelling at \( 0.5 \mathrm{c}[\mathrm{fwd} \) ] wrt the ground. A plasma cannon fires a pulse out the front of the ship so that the ground observer sees the pulse travel at \( 0.9 \mathrm{c}[\mathrm{fwd} \) ] wrt the ground. How fast do the observers in the ship see the pulse travel wit the ship?
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To find the speed of the pulse as observed from the ship, we can use the relativistic velocity addition formula: \[ u' = \frac{u + v}{1 + \frac{uv}{c^2}} \] where: - \( u \) is the velocity of the pulse with respect to the ground, - \( v \) is the velocity of the ship with respect to the ground, - \( c \) is the speed of light, - \( u' \) is the velocity of the pulse with respect to the ship. In this case, \( u = 0.9c \) and \( v = 0.5c \). Plugging in the values: \[ u' = \frac{0.9c + 0.5c}{1 + \frac{(0.9c)(0.5c)}{c^2}} = \frac{1.4c}{1 + 0.45} = \frac{1.4c}{1.45} \approx 0.9655c \] Thus, the observers in the ship see the pulse travel at approximately \( 0.9655c[\mathrm{fwd}] \).