the energy of an object with mass [FONT=MathJax_Math-italic]m[/FONT] and velocity [FONT=MathJax_Math-italic]v[/FONT] is given by the equation, where c is the speed of light:
E= (mc^2)/((1-(v^2/c^2))^0.5)
question 1: Find the energy in the limit that the velocity goes to zero.
question 2:What happens to the energy as the velocity [FONT=MathJax_Math-italic]v[/FONT] approaches the speed of light, [FONT=MathJax_Math-italic]c[/FONT]?
I'm really lost on the idea of limits, and how they are going to be used in calculus. This question confuses me even more, especially question 1. Any insight would be helpful.
E= (mc^2)/((1-(v^2/c^2))^0.5)
question 1: Find the energy in the limit that the velocity goes to zero.
question 2:What happens to the energy as the velocity [FONT=MathJax_Math-italic]v[/FONT] approaches the speed of light, [FONT=MathJax_Math-italic]c[/FONT]?
I'm really lost on the idea of limits, and how they are going to be used in calculus. This question confuses me even more, especially question 1. Any insight would be helpful.