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Special Relativity

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Title: Special Relativity


1
Special and General Relativity Einsteins
Physics
  • Special Relativity
  • and
  • General Relativity

2
Michelson-Morley Experiment
  • James Clerk Maxwell (1860) light is e/m waves
    traveling at c.
  • Waves require a medium, light must travel through
    an ether.
  • Michelson and Morley (1880s) looked for the
    ether using an interferometer.

3
Concept of the Interferometer
  • Two boats will travel 24 m forward and back at 4
    m/s. The river current is 2 m/s eastward.
  • North-South blue route (24 m / 4 m/s) x 2 12
    s.
  • East-West red route (24 m / 6 m/s) (24 m / 2
    m/s) 16 s.
  • Blue boat wins!
  • But, if the river flows northward, the red boat
    would win.

4
Michelson-Morley Experiment
  • As the earth moves through the ether, the wind
    acts like the river current, affecting the motion
    of the light waves.
  • Rotating the experiment will cause the
    interference fringes to change, proving the
    existence of the ether.

5
Michelson-Morley Experiment
  • When they conducted their experiment, no fringes
    were observed to change.
  • No ether exists!
  • A secondary outcome of the experiment was that c
    is always 3.00 x 108 m/s.
  • Lorenz proposed that the ether wind affected the
    distance between the mirrors by a factor of

6
Einsteins Question
  • Light propagates through space by changing
    electric and magnetic fields.
  • As a student, Albert Einstein wondered what would
    happen if you could travel along with a light
    wave?
  • Einstein devoted his life to understanding light.

Hmm...
7
Einsteins Postulates of Relativity
  • All the laws of nature are the same in all
    uniformly moving frames of reference. You cannot
    detect absolute uniform motion (no ether for
    reference).
  • The speed of light equals c and is independent of
    the speed of the source or the observer. C is
    absolute.
  • The evidence for 2

g
g
detector measures energy
detector measures SAME energy
pion
g
g
pion moving at 0.99c
8
Simultaneity
  • Einstein imagined lightning hitting two poles.
  • A stationary observer midway between the poles
    sees the light hit the two poles simultaneously.
  • A moving observer midway between the poles sees
    the light hit the pole that he is moving toward
    first, and the other pole afterwards.
  • The two observers cannot agree on the order of
    events
  • Time is relative! Only the speed of light is
    absolute!

9
Space-Time
  • speed distance / time.
  • Applied to light, c d / t. If c is absolute,
    and time is relative, then distance (space) must
    be relative too.
  • Einstein reasoned that the concepts of space and
    time are woven together into what he called
    space-time.

Think about it any event takes place at a
specific time and a specific place
10
Traveling in Space-Time
time
We travel mostly through time, but not through
much space.
A fast-moving spacecraft travels through more
space and thus through less time.
As an object approaches c, it travels mostly
through space and through little time.
space (distance)
slope t/d, and 1/v t/d. As velocity goes up,
slope goes down
11
Time Dilation
Imagine two scientists measuring a light-pulse
inside a moving spaceship. One is inside the
spaceship, the other is outside the spaceship
to proper time
Time and distance measured by observer inside the
spaceship.
Time and distance measured by observer outside
the spaceship.
t dilated time (or td)
12
Time Dilation
c t
c to
v t
t is dilated time, clock in motion with respect
to events to is proper time, clock at rest with
respect to events
13
Calculating Time Dilation
  • Proxima Centauri is the closest star to our solar
    system. If a spacecraft were sent to Proxima
    Centauri traveling at 75 of the speed of light
    (0.75 c), the trip would take 3.72 years
    according to the clocks onboard the ship. How
    long would the trip take according to people on
    Earth?

14
Time Dilation The Evidence
  • In 1971, two atomic clocks were placed on
    commercial jets and two reference atomic clocks
    were placed in a building. The clocks were
    synchronized.
  • The jets traveled around the world twice (once
    east, once west)
  • The clocks that traveled through more space (in
    jets) recorded less time than the stationary
    clocks, as predicted by Einstein.

15
The Twin Paradox
  • One twin travels at relativistic speeds away from
    the earth, turns around, and returns at
    relativistic speeds.
  • She will be younger than her twin brother!
  • The twin brother experiences the dilated time.

16
Twin Paradox The Evidence
  • 1976 at CERN
  • Muons normally decay in 2.2 ms (to) A muon
    should only be able to make 15 revolutions around
    the accelerator in this time.
  • When traveling at 0.9994 c, a muon will make 432
    revolutions and decay in 63.5 ms (td), outlasting
    a twin stationary muon by a factor of 29.

17
Length Contraction
  • length contraction moving objects appear to
    contract along the direction of motion.
  • Looking at a clock and meter-stick inside the
    spaceship, you would see less time pass for a
    beam of light to travel one meter since c d/t,
    distance must be less.

Lo proper length
LC contracted length
18
Length Contraction Calculation
  • All distances are contracted when you travel at
    relativistic speeds. Thus, Pluto, which is 39 AU
    away, would be closer if you traveled at 0.95
    c. What is the contracted distance?

19
Relativistic Momentum
Newton p mv
true only at non- relativistic speeds
Einstein p gmv
particle accelerator data supports Einstein
What is the momentum of a proton (1.67 x 10-27
kg) traveling at 0.999c (2.997x108 m/s)
according to Newton? What about to Einstein?
measured value Einsteins value
20
Relativistic Dynamics
  • Why cant v gt c?
  • As v ? c, p ? 8
  • Impulse-momentum theorem
  • FDt mDv Dp
  • If p ? 8, either F ? 8 or Dt ? 8
  • It either takes an infinite force or a finite
    force applied for an infinite period of time to
    reach the speed of light!

Einstein p gmv
Momentum (p)
Newton p mv
Speed (v) c
The answer to Einsteins question it is not
possible to ride a light beam, so there is no
paradox.
21
Eo mc2
  • rest energy the energy an object possesses due
    to its mass
  • mass frozen energy
  • objects gain/lose mass when they absorb/emit
    energy
  • The sun converts 4 billion kg/s into energy
    through the process of nuclear fusion (4 H ? He
    energy)
  • E mc2 (4 x 109 kg)(3 x 108 m/s)2
  • 3.6 x 1026 J each second!
  • 360 heptillion W light bulb

22
General Relativity
23
Equivalence Principle
  • Einsteins happiest thought was that you dont
    feel the force of gravity when you fall.
  • But artificial gravity exists in an accelerating
    spacecraft.
  • Gravity and acceleration are equivalent.
  • An experiment done on earth or done when
    accelerating at g in a spacecraft will yield the
    same results! (general relativity).

24
Light and the Equivalence Principle
  • A scientist in an accelerating spacecraft
    observes a horizontal beam of light to curve
    downward.
  • According to the equivalence principle, gravity
    should curve light in a similar manner.

Sun
gravity
Astronomical observations after WWI showed that
the sun did indeed bend starlight, supporting
Einstein.
acceleration
25
Curved Space
If mass bends light, and light moves in a
straight line, then mass must warp or curve
space.
Newtons laws could not fully explain the orbital
motion of Mercury however, Einstein used his
general theory to properly calculate the orbit.
26
Warped Space and Orbital Motion
Newton (Law 1) said that an object will move in
straight line unless acted on by unbalanced
force. Einstein suggested that the object moves
in a straight line through curved space!
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