MASON ASTR 302 - Introduction to Special and General Relativity

Unformatted text preview:

Introduction to Special and General RelativityMotivationThe Speed of LightThe Speed of LightIn Water Things Look Like ThisMichelson-Morley Experiment Michelson-Morley Experiment (cont.)With light, things look like this:So how is this possible??Welcome to The Strange World of Albert EinsteinThe BasicsEventsReference FramesLorentz TransformationReference Frames (cont.)The First Principle of RelativityThe Second Principle of Relativity What Follows from The BasicsWhat Happens to Simultaneous Events?View from the TrainThe View From The GroundSimultaneous EventsTime Dilation Time Dilation (cont.)Time Dilation (cont.)Time Dilation Time Dilation (cont.)Time Dilation (cont.)So How Much Does The Moving Clock Run Slow?The Factor GammaSome Time Dilation FactorsTime Dilation (cont.)FitzGerald Length ContractionWhy Length ContractioniClicker QuestionThe Twin ParadoxTwin ParadoxThe BIG PictureThe Concept of Space-timeSpace-Time DiagramsA trip to the StarsEnergyGeneral RelativityEnergyRelativity and Magnetism Relativity and Magnetism cont.The Equivalence PrincipleGeneral RelativityWhy Curvature?Black HolesGravity and TimeWhat Al and Bill seeDust orbiting a black holeBlack HolesThe Shape of the UniverseThe Big BangCurved in What?Introduction to SpecialIntroduction to Specialand General Relativityand General Relativity• Motivation:– Michelson-Morley Experiment– Induction versus Force Law•The Basics–Events– Principles of Relativity– Giving up on absolute space and time• What Follows from the Basics– Time Dilation – Length Contraction–Twin Paradox?• The Big Picture–Spacetime–KinematicsMotivationMotivationThe Speed of LightThe Speed of Light• Special Relativity becomes important in systems which are moving on the order of the speed of light• The speed of light is c=3X108 m/s is very fast:– Is exactly 299,792,458 m/s (how can they know this is the exact speed?)– 1 foot per nanosecond– 1 million times the speed of sound.– Around the earth 7 times in a second– Earth to sun in 15 min.• Galileo was the first person to propose that the speed of light be measured with a lantern relay. His experiment was tried shortly after his death. • In 1676 Ole Roemer first determined the speed of light (how can this be done with 17’th cent equipment.The Speed of LightThe Speed of Light• In 1873, Maxwell first understood that light was an electromagnetic wave.• It was the the understanding of the nature of EM radiation which first led to a conceptual problem that required relativity as a solution.• According to his equations, a pulse of light emitted from a source at rest would spread out at velocity c in all directions.• But what would happen if the pulse was emitted from a source that was moving?• This possibility confused physicists until 1905.In Water Things Look Like ThisIn Water Things Look Like This• A boat moving through water will see forward going waves as going slow and backwards going waves as going fastMichelsonMichelson--Morley ExperimentMorley Experiment• Albert Michelson and Edward Morley were two American physicists working at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland • They constructed a device which compared the velocity of light traveling in different directions (1887). • They found, much to their surprise that the speed of light was identical in all directions!• This is strange????smc /299792458=MichelsonMichelson--Morley Experiment (cont.)Morley Experiment (cont.)• If the aether theory were correct, light would thus move more slowly against the aether wind and more quickly downwind. The Michelson-Morley apparatus should easily be able to detect this difference.• In fact, the result was the exact opposite: light always moves at the same speedregardless of the velocity of the source or the observer or the direction that the light is moving!With light, things look like this:With light, things look like this:• A person on a cart moving at half the speed of light will see light moving at c.• A person watching on the ground will see that same light moving at the same speed, whether the light came from a stationary or moving sourceSo how is this possible??So how is this possible??• In the 18 years after the Michelson-Morley experiment, the smartest people in the world attempted to explain it away• In particular C.F. FitzGerald and H.A. Lorentzconstructed a mathematical formulation (called the Lorentz transformation) which seemed to explain things but no one could figure out which it all meant.• In 1905, Albert Einstein proposed the theory of Special Relativity which showed that the only way to explain the experimental result is to suppose that space and time as seen by one observer are distorted when observed by another observer (in such a way as to keep c invariant)Welcome to The Strange World of Welcome to The Strange World of Albert EinsteinAlbert Einstein• Some of the consequences of Special relativity are:– Events which are simultaneous to a stationary observer are not simultaneous to a moving observer.– Nothing can move faster than c, the speed of light in vacuum.– A stationary observer will see a moving clock running slow.– A moving object will be contracted along its direction of motion.– Mass can be shown to be a frozen form of energy according to the relation E=mc².The BasicsThe BasicsEventsEvents• In physics jargon, the word event has about the same meaning as it’s everyday usage.• An event occurs at a specific location in space at a specific moment in time:Reference FramesReference Frames• A reference frame is a means of describing the location of an event in space and time.• To construct a reference frame, lay out a bunch of rulers and synchronized clocks• You can then describe an event by where it occurs according to the rulers and when it occurs according to the clocks.LorentzLorentzTransformationTransformation• As we shall see, space and time are not absolute as in Newtonian physics and everyday experience.• The Mathematical relation between the description of two different observers is called the Lorentz transformation.• Some phenomena which follow from the Lorentz transformation are:– Relativity of Simultaneous events–Time Dilation– Length ContractionReference Frames (cont.)Reference Frames (cont.)• What is the relation between the description of an event in a moving reference frame and a stationary one?• To answer this question, we need to use the two


View Full Document

MASON ASTR 302 - Introduction to Special and General Relativity

Download Introduction to Special and General Relativity
Our administrator received your request to download this document. We will send you the file to your email shortly.
Loading Unlocking...
Login

Join to view Introduction to Special and General Relativity and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or
We will never post anything without your permission.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up

Join to view Introduction to Special and General Relativity 2 2 and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or

By creating an account you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use

Already a member?