Relativity I INTRODUCTION Albert Einstein In 1905 German-born American physicist Albert Einstein published his first paper outlining the theory of relativity.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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in calculating very large distances or very large aggregations of matter.
As the quantum theory applies to the very small, so the relativity theory applies to the verylarge.
Until 1887 no flaw had appeared in the rapidly developing body of classical physics.
In that year, the Michelson-Morley experiment, named after the American physicistAlbert Michelson and the American chemist Edward Williams Morley, was performed.
It was an attempt to determine the rate of the motion of the earth through theether, a hypothetical substance that was thought to transmit electromagnetic radiation, including light, and was assumed to permeate all space.
If the sun is at absoluterest in space, then the earth must have a constant velocity of 29 km/sec (18 mi/sec), caused by its revolution about the sun; if the sun and the entire solar system aremoving through space, however, the constantly changing direction of the earth's orbital velocity will cause this value of the earth's motion to be added to the velocity ofthe sun at certain times of the year and subtracted from it at others.
The result of the experiment was entirely unexpected and inexplicable; the apparent velocity ofthe earth through this hypothetical ether was zero at all times of the year.
What the Michelson-Morley experiment actually measured was the velocity of light through space in two different directions.
If a ray of light is moving through space at300,000 km/sec (186,000 mi/sec), and an observer is moving in the same direction at 29 km/sec (18 mi/sec), then the light should move past the observer at the rateof 299,971 km/sec (185,982 mi/sec); if the observer is moving in the opposite direction, the light should move past the observer at 300,029 km/sec (186,018 mi/sec).It was this difference that the Michelson-Morley experiment failed to detect.
This failure could not be explained on the hypothesis that the passage of light is notaffected by the motion of the earth, because such an effect had been observed in the phenomenon of the aberration of light; see Interference; Interferometer; Wave Motion.
In the 1890s FitzGerald and Lorentz advanced the hypothesis that when any object moves through space, its length in the direction of its motion is altered by the factorbeta.
The negative result of the Michelson-Morley experiment was explained by the assumption that the light actually traversed a shorter distance in the same time(that is, moved more slowly), but that this effect was masked because the distance was measured of necessity by some mechanical device which also underwent thesame shortening, just as when an object 2 m long is measured with a 3-m tape measure which has shrunk to 2 m, the object will appear to be 3 m in length.
Thus, inthe Michelson-Morley experiment, the distance which light traveled in 1 sec appeared to be 300,000 km (186,000 mi) regardless of how fast the light actually traveled.The Lorentz-FitzGerald contraction was considered by scientists to be an unsatisfactory hypothesis because it could not be applied to any problem in whichmeasurements of absolute motion could be made.
III SPECIAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY
Frames of ReferenceA situation can appear different when viewed from different frames of reference.
Try to imagine how an observer'sperceptions could change from frame to frame in this illustration.© Microsoft Corporation.
All Rights Reserved.
In 1905, Einstein published the first of two important papers on the theory of relativity, in which he dismissed the problem of absolute motion by denying its existence.According to Einstein, no particular object in the universe is suitable as an absolute frame of reference that is at rest with respect to space.
Any object (such as thecenter of the solar system) is a suitable frame of reference, and the motion of any object can be referred to that frame.
Thus, it is equally correct to say that a trainmoves past the station, or that the station moves past the train.
This example is not as unreasonable as it seems at first sight, for the station is also moving, due to themotion of the earth on its axis and its revolution around the sun.
All motion is relative, according to Einstein.
None of Einstein's basic assumptions was revolutionary;Newton had previously stated “absolute rest cannot be determined from the position of bodies in our regions.” Einstein stated the relative rate of motion between anyobserver and any ray of light is always the same, 300,000 km/sec (186,000 mi/sec), and thus two observers, moving relative to one another even at a speed of160,000 km/sec (100,000 mi/sec), each measuring the velocity of the same ray of light, would both find it to be moving at 300,000 km/sec (186,000 mi/sec), and thisapparently anomalous result was proved by the Michelson-Morley experiment.
According to classical physics, one of the two observers was at rest, and the other madean error in measurement because of the Lorentz-FitzGerald contraction of his apparatus; according to Einstein, both observers had an equal right to considerthemselves at rest, and neither had made any error in measurement.
Each observer used a system of coordinates as the frame of reference for measurements, andthese coordinates could be transformed one into the other by a mathematical manipulation.
The equations for this transformation, known as the Lorentz transformationequations, were adopted by Einstein, but he gave them an entirely new interpretation.
The speed of light is invariant in any such transformation.
According to the relativistic transformation, not only would lengths in the line of a moving object be altered but also time and mass.
A clock in motion relative to anobserver would seem to be slowed down, and any material object would seem to increase in mass, both by the beta factor.
The electron, which had just beendiscovered, provided a means of testing the last assumption.
Electrons emitted from radioactive substances have speeds close to the speed of light, so that the value ofbeta, for example, might be as large as 0.5, and the mass of the electron doubled.
The mass of a rapidly moving electron could be easily determined by measuring thecurvature produced in its path by a magnetic field; the heavier the electron, the greater its inertia and the less the curvature produced by a given strength of field ( see Magnetism).
Experimentation dramatically confirmed Einstein's prediction; the electron increased in mass by exactly the amount he predicted.
Thus, the kinetic energyof the accelerated electron had been converted into mass in accordance with the formula E=mc2 (see Atom; Nuclear Energy).
Einstein's theory was also verified by experiments on the velocity of light in moving water and on magnetic forces in moving substances.
The fundamental hypothesis on which Einstein's theory was based was the nonexistence of absolute rest in the universe.
Einstein postulated that two observers movingrelative to one another at a constant velocity would observe identically the phenomena of nature.
One of these observers, however, might record two events on distantstars as having occurred simultaneously, while the other observer would find that one had occurred before the other; this disparity is not a real objection to the theoryof relativity, because according to that theory simultaneity does not exist for distant events.
In other words, it is not possible to specify uniquely the time when an eventhappens without reference to the place where it happens.
Every particle or object in the universe is described by a so-called world line that describes its position in timeand space.
If two or more world lines intersect, an event or occurrence takes place; if the world line of a particle does not intersect any other world line, nothing hashappened to it, and it is neither important nor meaningful to determine the location of the particle at any given instant.
The “distance” or “interval” between any twoevents can be accurately described by means of a combination of space and time, but not by either of these separately.
The space-time of four dimensions (three forspace and one for time) in which all events in the universe occur is called the space-time continuum.
All of the above statements are consequences of special relativity, the name given to the theory developed by Einstein in 1905 as a result of his consideration of objects.
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