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Usually we don't bother to draw the whole lattice, but rather represent it by a
set of coordinate axes, x and y, and a single clock measuring time t, as shown
below. We have also put an observer, whom we shall name Lou, at rest in his
coordinate system.
Next we imagine that Lou has a light bulb at the "origin" of his coordinate
system. At some time t which we shall call zero he turns on the light. The
light moves away from the light bulb at 1,079,253,000 km/hr as measured by
Lou's system of rods and clocks. At some time t later the light will form a
sphere with the light bulb right at the center.
There are two animations of this situation. One is a "simple" animated gif with
a file size of 22k; it may be accessed by clicking here. The other is a Flash
animation with a file size of 16k; it may be accessed by clicking here.
Now, Lou has a twin sister Sue, whom we shall assume was born at the same
time as Lou (a biological impossibility). Sue has her own lattice of meter sticks
and clocks and she is at rest relative to them. Just as for Lou, we represent
Sue's rods and clocks as shown below.
Sue is an astronaut, and is in her rocket ship which is traveling at one-half the
speed of light to the right relative to Lou. Of course, relative to Sue, Lou is
travelling at half the speed of light to the left.
Let us imagine that Sue, traveling at half the speed of light relative to Lou,
goes by Lou and he turned on the light bulb just at the moment that Sue
passed by it. Sue will call this time zero as measured by her clocks.
Relative to Sue, the light bulb is traveling to the left at half the speed of light.
However, because of Einstein's "explanation", the speed of light relative to
her is exactly 1,079,253,000 km/hr. Thus, at some later time she will measure
that the outer edge of the light forms a perfect sphere with her at the middle.
There are both a animated gif and Flash animation of the above. To access
the 18k gif animation click here. To access the 18k Flash animation click here.
There is also a Flash animation of both Sue and Lou. To access the 22k
animation click here.
Note that the only assumption we have made here is the constancy of the
speed of light. Thus, to avoid this sort of weirdness one must come up with
another explanation of the null result of the Michelson-Morley experiment.
This theorem says that for any right triangle such as the one shown to the
right:
x2 + y2 = h2
Now, when Lou measures the position of the outer edge of the sphere of light
he can use Pythagoras' Theorem to calculate the radius r of the sphere:
But the radius at time t is just the speed of the light, c, times the time:
rLou = c tLou
So:
Notice that we don't need to label c as being the speed of light relative to
Lou, since it is the same number for all observers, including Sue.
Now, Sue measures the position of the outer edge of the sphere of light with
her rods and clocks and will conclude that:
Sometimes one hears that the Special Theory of Relativity says that all motion
is relative. This is not quite true. Galileo and Newton had a similar conception.
Crucial to Newton's thinking is that there is an absolute space, independent of
the things in that space:
For Newton, the laws of physics, such as the principle of inertia, are true in
any frame of reference either at rest relative to absolute space or in uniform
motion in a straight line relative to absolute space. Such reference frames are
called inertial. Notice there is a bit of a circular argument here: the laws of
physics are true in inertial frames, and inertial frames are ones in which the
laws of physics are true.
In any case, from the standpoint of any such inertial frame of reference all
motion can be described as being relative. If you are standing by the highway
watching a bus go by you at 100 km/hr, then relative to somebody on the bus
you are traveling in the opposite direction at 100 km/hr.
Once we realize that light is some sort of a wave, a natural question is "what
is waving?" One answer to this question is that it is the luminiferous ether.
The idea behind this word is that there is an all-pervading homogenous
massless substance everywhere in the universe, and it is this ether that is the
medium through which light propagates. Note that this ether could define
Newton's absolute space.
A rough analogy is to a sound wave traveling through the air. The air is the
medium and oscillations of the molecules of the air are what is "waving." The
speed of sound is about 1193 km/hr with respect to the air, depending on the
temperature and pressure. Thus if I am traveling through the air at 1193
km/hr in the same direction as a sound wave, the speed of the wave relative
to me will be zero.
In 1676 Römer successfully measured the speed of light, although his results
differed from the accepted value today by about 30%
Before we turn to the experiment itself we will consider a "race" between two
swimmers.
We have two identical swimmers, 1 and 2, who each swim the same distance
away from the raft, to the markers, and then swim back to the raft. The
"race" ends in a tie.
Now the raft and markers are being towed to the left. In this case the race
will no longer be a tie. In fact, it is not too hard to show that swimmer 2 wins
this race.
One of the difficulties that students experience in learning about the theories
of relativity is that it is easy to ask questions of themselves and/or others that
are not well formed. Insisting on complete statements often makes the
problems disappear. One common case of sloppy language leading to poorly
formed questions involves the concept of speed. If we say, for example, that
the swimmers in the above examples swim at 5 km/hr we have not made a
complete statement; we should say that the swimmers swim at 5 km/hr with
respect to the water. If we are stationary with respect to the water then they
swim at 5 km/hr with respect to us. But if we are moving at, say, 5 km/hr
with respect to the water in the direction that one of the swimmers is
swimming, that swimmer will be stationary relative to us.
Michelson and Morley did this experiment in the 1880's. The arms of the
interferometer were about 1.2 meters long. The apparatus was mounted on a
block of marble floating in a pool of mercury to reduce vibrations. They
adjusted the interferometer for constructive interference, and then gently
rotated the interferometer by 90 degrees.
Given the speed of light as 1,079,253,000 km/hr relative to the ether and the
speed of the earth equal to some number like 108,000 km/hr relative to the
ether, they calculated that they should easily see the combined beams going
through maxima and minima in the interference pattern as they rotated the
apparatus.
Except that when they did the experiment, they got no result. The
interference pattern did not change!
It was suggested that maybe the speed of the earth due to its rotation on its
axis was cancelling its speed due to its orbit around the sun. So they waited
12 hours and repeated the experiment. Again they got no result.
It was suggested that the Earth's motion in orbit around the Sun canceled the
other motions. So they waited six months and tried the experiment again.
And again they got no result.
It was suggested that maybe the mass of the earth "dragged" the ether along
with it. So they hauled the apparatus up on top of a mountain, hoping that
the mountain would be sticking up into the ether that was not being dragged
by the earth. And again they got no result.
Thus, this attempt to measure the motion of the earth relative to the ether
failed.
Lorentz was among many who were very puzzled by this result. He proposed
that when an object was moving relative to the ether, its length along its
direction of motion would be contracted by just the right amount needed to
explain the experimental result. If the length of the object when it is at rest
with respect to the ether is L0, then if is is moving at speed v through the
ether its length becomes L given by:
L=1−v2/c2−−−−−−−−√L0(1)(1)L=1−v2/c2L0
where c is the speed of light relative to the ether. If you chose to look at the
brief mathematical supplement above, the structure of this equation may look
familiar to you.
"If I pursue a beam of light with the velocity c I should observe such a beam
of light as a spatially oscillatory electromagnetic field at rest. However, there
seems to be no such thing, whether on the basis of experience or according
to [the theory of electricity and magnetism]. From the very beginning it
appeared to me intuitively clear that, judged from the standpoint of such an
observer, everything would have to happen according to the same laws as for
an observer who, relative to the earth, was at rest. For how, otherwise,
should the first observer know, i.e.. be able to determine, that he is in a state
of uniform motion?" -- As later written by Einstein in "Autobiographical
Notes", in Schilpp, ed., Albert Einstein: Philosopher-Scientist.
"... light is always propagated in empty space with a definite velocity c which
is independent of the state of [relative] motion of the emitting body .... The
introduction of a `luminiferous ether' will be superfluous inasmuch as the
view here to be developed will not require an `absolutely stationary space'
provided with special properties." -- Annalen Physik 17 (1905).
Put another way, the speed of light is 1,079,253,000 km/hr with respect to all
observers.
As we shall see, this one statement is equivalent to all of the Special Theory
of Relativity, and everything else is just a consequence.
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Kmdmkfm Special relativity was originally proposed by Albert Einstein in a paper
published on 26 September 1905 titled "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies".[p
1] The incompatibility of Newtonian mechanics with Maxwell's
equations of electromagnetism and, experimentally, the Michelson-Morley null result (and
subsequent similar experiments) demonstrated that the historically
hypothesized luminiferous aether did not exist. This led to Einstein's development of
special relativity, which corrects mechanics to handle situations involving all motions and
especially those at a speed close to that of light (known as relativistic velocities). Today,
special relativity is proven to be the most accurate model of motion at any speed when
gravitational and quantum effects are negligible. [3][4] Even so, the Newtonian model is still
valid as a simple and accurate approximation at low velocities (relative to the speed of
light), for example, everyday motions on Earth.
Special relativity has a wide range of consequences that have been experimentally
verified.[5] They include the relativity of simultaneity, length contraction, time dilation, the
relativistic velocity addition formula, the relativistic Doppler effect, relativistic mass, a
universal speed limit, mass–energy equivalence, the speed of causality and the Thomas
precession.[1][2] It has, for example, replaced the conventional notion of an absolute
universal time with the notion of a time that is dependent on reference frame
and spatial position. Rather than an invariant time interval between two events, there is
an invariant spacetime interval. Combined with other laws of physics, the two postulates
of special relativity predict the equivalence of mass and energy, as expressed in
the mass–energy equivalence formula , where is the speed of light in a vacuum.[6][7] It
also explains how the phenomena of electricity and magnetism are related. [1][2]
A defining feature of special relativity is the replacement of the Galilean
transformations of Newtonian mechanics with the Lorentz transformations. Time and
space cannot be defined separately from each other (as was earlier thought to be the
case). Rather, space and time are interwoven into a single continuum known as
"spacetime". Events that occur at the same time for one observer can occur at different
times for another.
Until Einstein developed general relativity, introducing a curved spacetime to incorporate
gravity, the phrase "special relativity" was not used. A translation sometimes used is
"restricted relativity"; "special" really means "special case". [p 2][p 3][p 4][note 1] Some of the
work of Albert Einstein in special relativity is built on the earlier work by Hendrik
Lorentz and Henri Poincaré. The theory became essentially complete in 1907. [4]
The theory is "special" in that it only applies in the special case where the spacetime is
"flat", that is, the curvature of spacetime, described by the energy–momentum tensor and
causing gravity, is negligible.[8][note 2] In order to correctly accommodate gravity, Einstein
formulated general relativity in 1915. Special relativity, contrary to some historical
descriptions, does accommodate accelerations as well as accelerating frames of
reference.[9][10]
Just as Galilean relativity is now accepted to be an approximation of special relativity that
is valid for low speeds, special relativity is considered an approximation of general
relativity that is valid for weak gravitational fields, that is, at a sufficiently small scale (e.g.,
for tidal forces) and in conditions of free fall. General relativity, however,
incorporates non-Euclidean geometry in order to represent gravitational effects as the
geometric curvature of spacetime. Special relativity is restricted to the flat spacetime
known as Minkowski space. As long as the universe can be modeled as a pseudo-
Riemannian manifold, a Lorentz-invariant frame that abides by special relativity can be
defined for a sufficiently small neighborhood of each point in this curved spacetime.
Galileo Galilei had already postulated that there is no absolute and well-defined state of
rest (no privileged reference frames), a principle now called Galileo's principle of
relativity. Einstein extended this principle so that it accounted for the constant speed of
light,[11] a phenomenon that had been observed in the Michelson–Morley experiment. He
also postulated that it holds for all the laws of physics, including both the laws of
mechanics and of electrodynamics.
As our knowledge of physics has advanced, scientists have run into more
counterintuitive situations. One is trying to reconcile general relativity — which
describes well what's going on with large objects — with quantum mechanics,
which is best used for very small things (such as uranium atom decay). The
two fields, which excellently describe their individual fields, are incompatible
with one another — which frustrated Einstein and generations of scientists
after him.
"Relativity gives nonsensical answers when you try to scale it down to
quantum size, eventually descending to infinite values in its description of
gravity. Likewise, quantum mechanics runs into serious trouble when you
blow it up to cosmic dimensions," an article in The Guardian pointed out in
2015.
There are several ideas to overcome this (which are beyond the scope of this
article), but one approach is to imagine a quantum theory of gravity that would
have a massless particle (called the graviton) to generate the force. But as
physicist Dave Goldberg pointed out in io9 in 2013, there are problems with
that. At the smallest scales, gravitons would have infinite energy density,
creating an unimaginably powerful gravity field. More study will be required to
see if this is possible.
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(2) Force is equal to the change in momentum per change of time. For a
constant mass, force equals mass times acceleration.
Einstein began thinking of light's behavior when he was just 16 years old, in
1895. He did a thought experiment, the encyclopedia said, where he rode on
one light wave and looked at another light wave moving parallel to him.
Classical physics should say that the light wave Einstein was looking at would
have a relative speed of zero, but this contradicted Maxwell's equations that
showed light always has the same speed: 186,000 miles a second. Another
problem with relative speeds is they would show that the laws
of electromagnetism change depending on your vantage point, which
contradicted classical physics as well (which said the laws of physics were the
same for everyone.)
Famous equation
Einstein's work led to some startling results, which today still seem
counterintuitive at first glance even though his physics is usually introduced at
the high school level.
2015 marks 100 years since the publication of Albert Einstein's General Theory of
Relativity. Learn the basics of Einstein's theory of relativity in our infographic
here. (Image credit: By Karl Tate, Infographics Artist)
One of the most famous equations in mathematics comes from special
relativity. The equation — E = mc2 — means "energy equals mass times the
speed of light squared." It shows that energy (E) and mass (m) are
interchangeable; they are different forms of the same thing. If mass is
somehow totally converted into energy, it also shows how much energy would
reside inside that mass: quite a lot. (This equation is one of the
demonstrations for why an atomic bomb is so powerful, once its mass is
converted to an explosion.)
This equation also shows that mass increases with speed, which effectively
puts a speed limit on how fast things can move in the universe. Simply put,
the speed of light (c) is the fastest velocity at which an object can travel in a
vacuum. As an object moves, its mass also increases. Near the speed of light,
the mass is so high that it reaches infinity, and would require infinite energy to
move it, thus capping how fast an object can move. The only reason light
moves at the speed it does is because photons, the quantum particles that
make up light, have a mass of zero.
Another strange conclusion of Einstein's work comes from the realization that
time moves relative to the observer. An object in motion experiences time
dilation, meaning that time moves more slowly when one is moving, than
when one is standing still. Therefore, a person moving ages more slowly than
a person at rest. So yes, when astronaut Scott Kelly spent nearly a year
aboard the International Space Station in 2015-16, his twin astronaut
brother Mark Kelly aged a little faster than Scott.
While this time dilation sounds very theoretical, it does have practical
applications as well. If you have a Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) receiver
in your car, the receiver attempts to find signals from at least three satellites to
coordinate your position. The GPS satellites send out timed radio signals that
the receiver listens to, triangulating (or more properly speaking, trilaterating)
its position based on the travel time of the signals. The challenge is, the
atomic clocks on the GPS are moving and would therefore run faster than
atomic clocks on Earth, creating timing issues. So, engineers need to make
the clocks on a GPS tick slower, according to Richard Pogge, an astronomer
at Ohio State University.
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1. Equilibrium of Structures
Loading on Structures
Conditions of Equilibrium
Transmissibility of Force
Principle of superposition
Compound Beams
Exercise 1
Internal Forces