Length Contraction Factor Calculator

Analyze high-speed motion with precise contraction and gamma outputs. Compare units, percentages, and measured lengths. Visualize results clearly for physics study, labs, and revision.

Calculator Input

Reset

The contraction factor only applies along the direction of motion, and the entered velocity must remain below light speed.

Plotly Graph

This graph shows how the contraction factor changes as speed approaches light speed.

Example Data Table

Example below uses a rest length of 10 m and several speed ratios.

Speed Ratio β Lorentz Factor γ Contraction Factor Observed Length (m)
0.10 1.005038 0.994987 9.949874
0.30 1.048285 0.953939 9.539392
0.60 1.250000 0.800000 8.000000
0.80 1.666667 0.600000 6.000000
0.95 3.202563 0.312250 3.122499

Formula Used

Contraction Factor:

k = √(1 - v²/c²)

Contracted Length:

L = L₀ × k

Lorentz Factor:

γ = 1 / √(1 - v²/c²)

Here, L₀ is rest length, L is observed length, v is velocity, and c is the speed of light.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the object’s rest length.
  2. Enter the velocity value.
  3. Select how the speed is expressed, such as fraction of c.
  4. Choose the output length unit.
  5. Set decimal precision for detailed output.
  6. Press Calculate Now.
  7. Review the contraction factor, gamma, observed length, and reduction percentage.
  8. Use the CSV or PDF export buttons for reports or study notes.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does the contraction factor represent?

The contraction factor tells you how much an object’s length shrinks along its motion direction when observed from another frame moving at relativistic speed.

2. Is the rest length the longest length?

Yes. Rest length is measured in the object’s own frame, where the object is not moving along the measured direction. Any relativistic observer sees an equal or shorter length.

3. Why must velocity stay below light speed?

The special relativity formula requires speeds below c. At v = c or above, the square root term becomes zero or imaginary, making the standard length contraction expression invalid.

4. Does contraction happen in every direction?

No. Length contraction only affects the dimension parallel to the direction of motion. Perpendicular dimensions remain unchanged in special relativity.

5. What is the difference between gamma and contraction factor?

Gamma grows larger with speed, while the contraction factor becomes smaller. They are reciprocals of each other when comparing the same relativistic expression.

6. Can I use any length unit here?

Yes. The contraction factor is dimensionless, so the observed length stays in the same unit as the rest length. Unit choice only changes the displayed label.

7. When is contraction noticeable?

It becomes noticeable at speeds that are a significant fraction of light speed. At everyday speeds, the effect is tiny and usually impossible to detect directly.

8. Is this calculator useful for students?

Yes. It helps students connect equations, numerical output, graphs, and interpretation. That makes relativity problems easier to understand, verify, and present.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.