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Experimental Foundations of General Relativity

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Title: Experimental Foundations of General Relativity


1
Experimental Foundationsof General Relativity
(internet version image removed)
  • Rafael Lang
  • Monash University
  • Southern Hemisphere Spring 2002

2
Competing Theories of Gravity
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
3
Need Criteria for Viability
  • Basic conditions Theory must be
  • Complete
  • Self-consistent
  • Relativistic
  • Newtonian

4
Theories that fail already
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
5
Universality of Free Fall
  • Test the Uniqueness of Free Fall (the Weak
    Equivalence Principle)
  • All bodies fall with the same acceleration
  • Define test parameter

6
First Experiments
  • Newton (1686) uses Pendulum with different
    compositions but equal masses
  • Eötvös 1922 uses torsion balance

7
Eötvös Experiment Principle
  • Centrifugal forces and other effects cause a
    torque in the pendulum. This torque is modulated
    with the rotation frequency.

?
m
m
g
8
Eöt-Wash Experiments
  • Most accurate experiments with sophisticated
    torsion balances

(internet version images removed)
9
Upper limits on ?
10
Local Lorentz Invariance
  • The outcome of any local non-gravitational
    experiment is independent of the velocity of the
    freely-falling reference frame in which it is
    performed
  • Well known from Special Relativity.
  • Violations would mean
  • Test parameter

11
Michelson-Morley Experiments
  • In various forms
  • Roundtrip or One-way propagation
  • Laser or Optical Fibre Link
  • Most accurate experiment compare phase of two
    hydrogen maser clocks as fuction of Earths
    orientation

12
Hughes-Drever Experiments
  • Search for galaxy-induced anisotropies in quantum
    states of atoms
  • Drever 1961 Look for resonance in the four J2/3
    ground states of the 7Li nucleus

13
Drever Experiment Data
  • Typical Oscilloscope Display

induced current
0
5
10
Time / s
14
Upper limits on ?
15
Local Position Invariance
  • The outcome of any local non-gravitational
    experiment is independent of where and when in
    the universe it is performed
  • Splits into
  • spatial invariance
  • invariance in time

16
PoundRebka Experiments
  • Examine the Gravitational Redshift to test the
    Spatial Local Position Invariance
  • Compare acceleration of local Lorentz frames with
    acceleration of test particles.

(internet version image removed)
17
Gravitational Red-Shift
ltBgt
ltAgt
gAH -
- gBH
hn
H
hn
ltBgt
ltAgt
Gravitating Body
18
Upper limits on a
19
Spatial variation of Constants
  • Get a spatial variation for nongravitational
    constants
  • Finestructure constant

20
Constancy of Constants
  • Timelike aspect of the principle of Local
    Position Invariance
  • The Oklo Natural Reactor gives for the fine
    structure constant

(internet version image removed)
21
Einstein Equivalence Principle
  • Uniqueness of Free Fall
  • Local Lorentz Invariance
  • Local Position Invariance
  • How are those principles related?

22
Schiffs Conjecture
Uniqueness of Free Fall alone
Einstein Equivalence Principle
23
Plausible? Proofen?
  • Although principles seem to be independent
  • Mathematical formalism restricted by
  • Newtonian limit
  • Special relativistic limit
  • Experimental results
  • Some deeper connections likely to appear
  • Proof so far only within the TH??Formalism.

24
Schiffs Conjecture Example
ltAgt
WEP
H
Quantum State
LPI
Gravitating Body
25
Metric Theory Definition
  • Space-time is endowed with a symmetric metric
  • Trajectories of freely falling bodies are
    geodesics of that metric

Einstein Equivalence Principle
Only Metric Theories viable
26
Universral (Metric) Coupling
  • All non-gravitational fields couple in the same
    way to a single gravitational field
  • Gravity is a property of spacetime itself, not
    just a field in spacetime
  • Space-time is curved

(internet version image removed)
27
Theories that violate EEP
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
28
Need more experiments
  • Main testing ground for gravitational physics is
    the Solar System.
  • Take equations of any metric theory
  • Zeroth order expansion empty, flat space
  • First order expansion Newtonian physics
  • Second order terms Post-Newtonian effects

29
Parametrized Post-NewtonianFormalism (PPN)
  • Expand the metrics
  • Identify various potentials
  • They have 10 PPN parameters in front
  • Calculate those parameters
  • Compare with experiments

30
Strong Equivalence Principle
  • Generalized Uniqueness of Free Fall
  • All bodies fall with the same acceleration
  • Generalized Local Lorentz Invariance
  • All experiments are independent of the velocity
    of the local Lorentz frame
  • Generalized Local Position Invariance
  • All experiments are independent of where and
    when they are performed

31
Nordtvedt Effect
  • Violation of Generalized Uniqueness of Free Fall
  • Self-Gravitating bodies have different
    accelerations
  • Polarization of Moons orbit
  • Depends on Nordtvedt Parameter
  • Shapiro 1976
  • Problem Only a combination of many parameters

32
Geophysical Measurements
  • Violation of Generalized Local Lorentz Invariance
  • ? PPN parameter
  • Galaxy induced perihelion shift
  • Anisotropies in tides on Earth
  • Measurements on tides

33
Theories that violate GLLI
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
34
Constancy of Newtonian Gravitational Constant G
  • Violation of Generalized Timelike Local Position
    Invariance
  • Planets orbits (Shapiro 1970s)
  • ? PPN parameters

35
Theories that violate GLPI
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
36
Deflection of Light
  • This effect is (lt -1.75 arcsec)

(internet version image removed)
37
Deflection of Light Results
  • In General Relativity
  • First Experiment by Eddington with the total
    solar eclipse 1919
  • Enough to rule out Newton, but not to
    distinguish between alternative theories.

38
Theories that predict ?0 fail
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
39
Shapiro Time Delay
  • Locally speed of light is constant
  • But space-time curvature changes light path
  • ? Globally effect appears as decrease in speed

Bending of Light
Artists Impression
Direct path
40
Shapiro Time Delay Results
  • Also depends on (
    )
  • Use Very Long Baseline Interferometry and take
    also Light Deflection into account to get

41
Time Delay Principle
  • Use data from radar or radio ranging experiments
  • Calculate orbit
  • from elongation data
  • (time delay neglible)
  • Compare with data
  • near superior conjunction
  • (strong time delay)

42
Unlikely Scalar-Tensor Theories
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
43
Perihelion Shift of Mercury
  • Discovered by Le Verrier 1859
  • General Precession 5599.7 arcsec/century
  • Known contributions 5557.0 arcsec/century
  • Relativistic effect 42.7 arcsec/century
  • Today Radar measurements

44
Theories that fail
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
45
Gravito-Magnetism
  • Compare Einsteins Field Equations in relaxed
    form with Maxwells Equations
  • Einstein
  • Maxwell
  • Expect gravitational effect produced by moving or
    rotating matter Lense-Thirring Effect

46
Test Lens-Thirring Effect
  • LAGEOS satellites (2002) Effect exists
  • Gravity Probe-B (2003) Precise measurement with
    Gyroscopes in
  • Low Polar Orbit

47
Current PPN Limits
  • Parameter Effect Limit
  • ?-1 time delay 2 10-3
  • light deflection 3 10-4
  • ?-1 perihelion shift 3 10-3
  • Nordtvedt effect 6 10-4
  • ? Earth tides 1 10-3
  • ?1 orbital polarization 2 10-4
  • ?2 spin precession 4 10-7
  • ?3 pulsar acceleration 2 10-20
  • ?1 2 10-2
  • ?2 binary acceleration 4 10-5
  • ?3 Newton's third law 1 10-8
  • ?4 (not independent)

48
Leaving Post-Newtonian Limit
  • Very difficult to obtain analytic solutions
  • ? Compare experimental results with General
    Relativistic calculations and look out for
    inconsistencies

49
Binary Pulsar
  • Assume neutron stars orbiting
  • Neglect tidal interaction
  • Post-Keplerian Parameters
  • ? Redshift and time delay
  • ? Derivative of orbital period
  • ? Rate of periastron advance
  • Feed ?,? in General Relativity Models
  • Then predict ?

BPSR191316
50
Binary Pulsar Test of GR
51
Theories that fail
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
52
Some theories resist to fail
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
53
Gravitational Wave Polarization
  • General Relativity
  • 2 modes
  • Scalar-Tensor Theories
  • 3 modes
  • General Metric
  • up to 6 modes

54
Do we really need Aesthetics?
  • Malcolm MacCallum, 1976
  • ... Unfortunately, any finite number of
    effects can be fitted by a sufficiently
    complicated theory. ... Aesthetic or
    philosophical motives will therefore continue to
    play a part in the widespread faith in Einstein's
    theory, even if all tests verify its predictions.

55
Philosophical Aspect
  • Misner, Thorne and Wheeler, 1973
  • Among all bodies of physical law none has ever
    been found that is simpler and more beautiful
    than Einstein's geometric theory of gravity

56
Conclusion?
  • Newton 1686

Poincaré 1890
Einstein 1912
Nordstrøm 1912
Nordstrøm 1913
Einstein and Fokker 1914
Einstein 1916
Whitehead 1922
Cartan 1923
Birkhoff 1943
Milne 1948
Thiry 1948
Papapetrou 1954
Fierz and Pauli 1939
Papapetrou 1954
Jordan 1955
Littlewood and Bergmann 1956
Brans and Dicke 1961
Yilmaz 1962
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Whitrow and Morduch 1965
Kustaanheimo and Nuotio 1967
Deser and Laurent 1968
Page and Tupper 1968
Bergmann 1968
Nordtvedt 1970
Bollini, Giambiagi and Tiomno 1970
Wagoner 1970
Rosen 1971
Ni 1972
Ni 1972
Hellings and Nordtvedt 1972
Will and Nordtvedt 1972
Ni 1973
Yilmaz 1973
Lightman and Lee 1973
Lee, Lightman and Ni 1974
Rosen 1975
Belinfante and Swihart 1975
Lee et al. 1976
Bekenstein 1977
Barker 1978
Rastall 1979
Coleman (20thcentury)
Kaluza-Klein (20thcentury)
Overlooked (20thcentury)
57
(internet version image removed)
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