Here's a small paragraph from Carl Sagan's "Cosmos" describing what a person travelling near the speed of light would observe (as a thought experiment):
"...As your speed increases, you begin to see around the corner of passing objects. While you are rigidly facing forward, things that are behind you appear within your forward field of vision. ....ultimately everything is squeezed into a tiny circular window, which just stays ahead of you."
Can someone please explain in an intuitive way why we would end up seeing objects behind us as being in front of us? And why would it be circular? I wasn't expecting anything to be squeezed as well, since I thought that length contraction applies only from the point of view of an observer in the "stationary" reference frame when describing someone moving near the speed of light.
Would really appreciate some enlightenment on this issue.
Some related questions: Approaching speed of light: why do objects appear further away in front of me?, How realistic is the game A Slower Speed of Light?, Length contraction in Gamow's "Mr. Tompkin in Wonderland", Understanding the Headlight/Beaming effect. Another cool relativistic vision effect is Terrell rotation.