Striking of a bell and the sound heard – as per two observers
Relativistic Bullet Striking a Bell: Frame Analysis
Events in the bell’s rest frame
:
: bullet strikes bell at
.
: bell begins emitting a pressure (sound) wave at
, with
a (possibly tiny) response time.
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Consequences: For timelike-separated events, all inertial observers agree on the order. Thus
occurs before
in every frame—no frame can render them simultaneous.
Observer 1 (on the bell; frame
)
She is at rest with the bell, so:
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Not simultaneous. The strike precedes the onset of emission by
.
Observer 2 (receding from the bell along the bullet’s direction)
Let Observer 2 move at constant speed
in
. Their inertial frame is
with Lorentz factor
. For the emission event
(which has
in
):
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Thus the time gap between strike and start of emission is even longer in
(time dilation). Still not simultaneous.
When does Observer 2 actually hear the sound?
Let sound propagate in the air rest frame
at speed
. Suppose at
Observer 2 is at
and recedes at speed
. The sound front, launched at
, obeys:
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The reception time
solves
:
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- If
:
is finite and positive ⇒ Observer 2 eventually hears the bell. - If
: the sound never catches up ⇒ Observer 2 never hears the bell (in the medium’s rest frame).
The reception event
is also timelike relative to
(any sub-
signal yields
). Hence the ordering
is invariant across frames. In
, the elapsed time from strike to reception is:
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You can insert the expression for
to see explicitly how
,
,
, and
shape the delay in
.
Key Takeaways
- Never simultaneous in any frame:
(strike) precedes
(emission start) for all observers since the separation is timelike. - Moving observer sees a larger gap: the interval between strike and emission start is
in the receding frame. - Hearing depends on outrunning sound: if
, the receding observer never hears the bell. - Causal order is invariant: strike
emit
(possibly) receive is preserved in all inertial frames; only the measured time intervals differ.