General
relativity n' Special Relativity
General
relativity
General relativity is a theory of gravitation
and to understand the background to the theory we have to
look at how theories of gravitation developed. Aristotle's
notion of the motion of bodies impeded understanding of gravitation
for a long time. He believed that force could only be applied
by contact, force at a distance being impossible, and a constant
force was required to maintain a body in uniform motion.
Copernicus's view of the solar system was important as it
allowed sensible consideration of gravitation. Kepler's laws
of planetary motion and Galileo's understanding of the motion
and falling bodies set the scene for Newton's theory of gravity
which was presented in the Principia in 1687. Newton's law
of gravitation is expressed by
F = G M1M2/d2
where F is the force between the bodies of masses M1, M2 and
d is the distance between them. G is the universal gravitational
constant.
After receiving their definitive analytic form from Euler,
Newton's axioms of motion were reworked by Lagrange, Hamilton,
and Jacobi into very powerful and general methods, which employed
new analytic quantities, such as potential, related to force
but remote from everyday experience. Newton's universal gravitation
was considered proved correct, thanks to the work of Clairaut
and Laplace. Laplace looked at the stability of the solar
system in Traité du Mécanique Céleste
in 1799. In fact the so-called three-body problem was extensively
studied in the 19th Century and was not properly understood
until much later. The study of the gravitational potential
allowed variations in gravitation caused by irregularities
in the shape of the earth to be studied both practically and
theoretically. Poisson used the gravitational potential approach
to give an equation which, unlike Newton's, could be solved
under rather general conditions.
Newton's theory of gravitation was highly
successful. There was little reason to question it except
for one weakness which was to explain how each of the two
bodies knew the other was there. Some profound remarks about
gravitation were made by Maxwell in 1864. His major work A
dynamical theory of the electromagnetic field (1864) was written
... to explain the electromagnetic action
between distant bodies without assuming the existence of forces
capable of acting directly at sensible distances.
At the end of the work Maxwell comments on gravitation.
After tracing to the action of the surrounding medium both
the magnetic and the electric attractions and repulsions,
and finding them to depend on the inverse square of the distance,
we are naturally led to inquire whether the attraction of
gravitation, which follows the same law of the distance, is
not also traceable to the action of a surrounding medium.
However Maxwell notes that there is a paradox
caused by the attraction of like bodies. The energy of the
medium must be decreased by the presence of the bodies and
Maxwell said As I am unable to understand in what way a medium
can possess such properties, I cannot go further in this direction
in searching for the cause of gravitation. In 1900 Lorentz
conjectured that gravitation could be attributed to actions
which propagate with the velocity of light. Poincaré,
in a paper in July 1905 (submitted days before Einstein's
special relativity paper), suggested that all forces should
transform according the Lorentz transformations. In this case
he notes that Newton's law of gravitation is not valid and
proposed gravitational waves which propagated with the velocity
of light.
In 1907, two years after proposing the special
theory of relativity, Einstein was preparing a review of special
relativity when he suddenly wondered how Newtonian gravitation
would have to be modified to fit in with special relativity.
At this point there occurred to Einstein, described by him
as the happiest thought of my life , namely that an observer
who is falling from the roof of a house experiences no gravitational
field. He proposed the Equivalence Principle as a consequence:-
... we shall therefore assume the complete
physical equivalence of a gravitational field and the corresponding
acceleration of the reference frame. This assumption extends
the principle of relativity to the case of uniformly accelerated
motion of the reference frame.
After the major step of the equivalence principle
in 1907, Einstein published nothing further on gravitation
until 1911. Then he realised that the bending of light in
a gravitational field, which he knew in 1907 was a consequence
of the equivalence principle, could be checked with astronomical
observations. He had only thought in 1907 in terms of terrestrial
observations where there seemed little chance of experimental
verification. Also discussed at this time is the gravitational
redshift, light leaving a massive body will be shifted towards
the red by the energy loss of escaping the gravitational field.
Einstein published further papers on gravitation
in 1912. In these he realised that the Lorentz transformations
will not apply in this more general setting. Einstein also
realised that the gravitational field equations were bound
to be non-linear and the equivalence principle appeared to
only hold locally.
This work by Einstein prompted others to produce
gravitational theories. Work by Nordström, Abraham and
Mie was all a consequence of Einstein's, so far failed, attempts
to find a satisfactory theory. However Einstein realised his
problems.
If all accelerated systems are equivalent,
then Euclidean geometry cannot hold in all of them.
Einstein then remembered that he had studied
Gauss's theory of surfaces as a student and suddenly realised
that the foundations of geometry have physical significance.
He consulted his friend Grossmann who was able to tell Einstein
of the important developments of Riemann, Ricci (Ricci-Curbastro)
and Levi-Civita. Einstein wrote
... in all my life I have not laboured nearly
so hard, and I have become imbued with great respect for mathematics,
the subtler part of which I had in my simple-mindedness regarded
as pure luxury until now.
In 1913 Einstein and Grossmann published a
joint paper where the tensor calculus of Ricci and Levi-Civita
is employed to make further advances. Grossmann gave Einstein
the Riemann-Christoffel tensor which, together with the Ricci
tensor which can be derived from it, were to become the major
tools in the future theory. Progress was being made in that
gravitation was described for the first time by the metric
tensor but still the theory was not right. When Planck visited
Einstein in 1913 and Einstein told him the present state of
his theories Planck said
As an older friend I must advise you against it for in the
first place you will not succeed, and even if you succeed
no one will believe you.
Planck was wrong, but only just, for when
Einstein was to succeed with his theory it was not readily
accepted. It was the second half of 1915 that saw Einstein
finally put the theory in place. Before that however he had
written a paper in October 1914 nearly half of which is a
treatise on tensor analysis and differential geometry. This
paper led to a correspondence between Einstein and Levi-Civita
in which Levi-Civita pointed out technical errors in Einstein's
work on tensors. Einstein was delighted to be able to exchange
ideas with Levi-Civita whom he found much more sympathetic
to his ideas on relativity than his other colleagues.
At the end of June 1915 Einstein spent a week at Göttingen
where he lectured for six 2 hour sessions on his (incorrect)
October 1914 version of general relativity. Hilbert and Klein
attended his lectures and Einstein commented after leaving
Göttingen
To my great joy, I succeeded in convincing
Hilbert and Klein completely.
The final steps to the theory of general relativity were taken
by Einstein and Hilbert at almost the same time. Both had
recognised flaws in Einstein's October 1914 work and a correspondence
between the two men took place in November 1915. How much
they learnt from each other is hard to measure but the fact
that they both discovered the same final form of the gravitational
field equations within days of each other must indicate that
their exchange of ideas was helpful.
On the 18th November he made a discovery about which he wrote
For a few days I was beside myself with joyous excitement
. The problem involved the advance of the perihelion of the
planet Mercury. Le Verrier, in 1859, had noted that the perihelion
(the point where the planet is closest to the sun) advanced
by 38" per century more than could be accounted for from
other causes. Many possible solutions were proposed, Venus
was 10% heavier than was thought, there was another planet
inside Mercury's orbit, the sun was more oblate than observed,
Mercury had a moon and, really the only one not ruled out
by experiment, that Newton's inverse square law was incorrect.
This last possibility would replace the 1/d2 by 1/dp, where
p = 2+ for some very small number . By 1882 the advance was
more accurately known, 43'' per century. From 1911 Einstein
had realised the importance of astronomical observations to
his theories and he had worked with Freundlich to make measurements
of Mercury's orbit required to confirm the general theory
of relativity. Freundlich confirmed 43" per century in
a paper of 1913. Einstein applied his theory of gravitation
and discovered that the advance of 43" per century was
exactly accounted for without any need to postulate invisible
moons or any other special hypothesis. Of course Einstein's
18 November paper still does not have the correct field equations
but this did not affect the particular calculation regarding
Mercury. Freundlich attempted other tests of general relativity
based on gravitational redshift, but they were inconclusive.
Also in the 18 November paper Einstein discovered
that the bending of light was out by a factor of 2 in his
1911 work, giving 1.74". In fact after many failed attempts
(due to cloud, war, incompetence etc.) to measure the deflection,
two British expeditions in 1919 were to confirm Einstein's
prediction by obtaining 1.98" 0.30" and 1.61"
0.30".
On 25 November Einstein submitted his paper
The field equations of gravitation which give the correct
field equations for general relativity. The calculation of
bending of light and the advance of Mercury's perihelion remained
as he had calculated it one week earlier.
Five days before Einstein submitted his 25
November paper Hilbert had submitted a paper The foundations
of physics which also contained the correct field equations
for gravitation. Hilbert's paper contains some important contributions
to relativity not found in Einstein's work. Hilbert applied
the variational principle to gravitation and attributed one
of the main theorem's concerning identities that arise to
Emmy Noether who was in Göttingen in 1915. No proof of
the theorem is given. Hilbert's paper contains the hope that
his work will lead to the unification of gravitation and electromagnetism.
In fact Emmy Noether's theorem was published
with a proof in 1918 in a paper which she wrote under her
own name. This theorem has become a vital tool in theoretical
physics. A special case of Emmy Noether's theorem was written
down by Weyl in 1917 when he derived from it identities which,
it was later realised, had been independently discovered by
Ricci in 1889 and by Bianchi (a pupil of Klein) in 1902.
Immediately after Einstein's 1915 paper giving
the correct field equations, Karl Schwarzschild found in 1916
a mathematical solution to the equations which corresponds
to the gravitational field of a massive compact object. At
the time this was purely theoretical work but, of course,
work on neutron stars, pulsars and black holes relied entirely
on Schwarzschild's solutions and has made this part of the
most important work going on in astronomy today.
Einstein had reached the final version of
general relativity after a slow road with progress but many
errors along the way. In December 1915 he said of himself
That fellow Einstein suits his convenience.
Every year he retracts what he wrote the year before.
Most of Einstein's colleagues were at a loss to understand
the quick succession of papers, each correcting, modifying
and extending what had been done earlier. In December 1915
Ehrenfest wrote to Lorentz referring to the theory of November
25, 1915. Ehrenfest and Lorentz corresponded about the general
theory of relativity for two months as they tried to understand
it. Eventually Lorentz understood the theory and wrote to
Ehrenfest saying I have congratulated Einstein on his brilliant
results . Ehrenfest responded
Your remark "I have congratulated Einstein on his brilliant
results" has a similar meaning for me as when one Freemason
recognises another by a secret sign.
In March 1916 Einstein completed an article explaining general
relativity in terms more easily understood. The article was
well received and he then wrote another article on relativity
which was widely read and went through over 20 printings.
Today relativity plays a role in many areas, cosmology, the
big bang theory etc. and now has been checked by experiment
to a high degree of accuracy.
Special relativity
The classical laws of physics were formulated
by Newton in the Principia in 1687. According to this theory
the motion of a particle has to be described relative to an
inertial frame in which the particle, not subjected to external
forces, will move at a constant velocity in a straight line.
Two inertial frames are related in that they move in a fixed
direction at a constant speed with respect to each other.
Time in the frames differs by a constant and all times can
be described relative to an absolute time. This 17th Century
theory was not challenged until the 19th Century when electric
and magnetic phenomena were studied theoretically.
It had long been known that sound required a medium to travel
through and it was quite natural to postulate a medium for
the transmission of light. Such a medium was called the ether
and many 19th Century scientists postulated an ether with
various properties. Cauchy, Stokes, Thomson and Planck all
postulated ethers with differing properties and by the end
of the 19th Century light, heat, electricity and magnetism
all had their respective ethers.
A knowledge that the electromagnetic field
was spread with a velocity essentially the same as the speed
of light caused Maxwell to postulate that light itself was
an electromagnetic phenomenon. Maxwell wrote an article on
Ether for the 1878 edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica. He
proposed the existence of a single ether and the article tells
of a failed attempt by Maxwell to measure the effect of the
ether drag on the earth's motion. He also proposed an astronomical
determination of the ether drag by measuring the velocity
of light using Jupiter's moons at different positions relative
to the earth.
Prompted by Maxwell's ideas, Michelson began
his own terrestrial experiments and in 1881 he reported
The result of the hypothesis of a stationary
ether is shown to be incorrect, and the necessary conclusion
follows that the hypothesis is erroneous.
Lorentz wrote a paper in 1886 where he criticised
Michelson's experiment and really was not worried by the experimental
result which he dismissed being doubtful of its accuracy.
Michelson was persuaded by Thomson and others to repeat the
experiment and he did so with Morley, again reporting that
no effect had been found in 1887. It appeared that the velocity
of light was independent of the velocity of the observer.
[Michelson and Morley were to refine their experiment and
repeat it many times up to 1929.]
Also in 1887 Voigt first wrote down the transformations
x' = x - vt, y' = y/g, z' = z/g, t' = t -
vx/c2
and showed that certain equations were invariant under these
transformations. These transformations, with a different scale
factor, are now known as the Lorentz equations and the group
of Lorentz transformations gives the geometry of special relativity.
All this was unknown to Voigt who was writing on the Doppler
shift when he wrote down the transformations.
Voigt corresponded with Lorentz about the Michelson-Morley
experiment in 1887 and 1888 but Lorentz does not seem to have
learnt of the transformations at that stage. Lorentz however
was now greatly worried by the new Michelson-Morley experiment
of 1887.
In 1889 a short paper was published by the
Irish physicist George FitzGerald in Science. The paper The
ether and the earth's atmosphere takes up less than half a
page and is non-technical. FitzGerald pointed out that the
results of the Michelson-Morley experiment could be explained
only if
... the length of material bodies changes,
according as they are moving through the ether or across it,
by an amount depending on the square of the ratio of their
velocities to that of light.
Lorentz was unaware of FitzGerald's paper and in 1892 he proposed
an almost identical contraction in a paper which now took
the Michelson-Morley experiment very seriously. When it was
pointed out to Lorentz in 1894 that FitzGerald had published
a similar theory he wrote to FitzGerald who replied that he
had sent an article to Science but I do not know if they ever
published it . He was glad to know that Lorentz agreed with
him for I have been rather laughed at for my view over here
. Lorentz took every opportunity after this to acknowledge
that FitzGerald had proposed the idea first. Only FitzGerald,
who did not know if his paper had been published, believed
that Lorentz had published first!
Larmor wrote an article in 1898 Ether and matter in which
he wrote down the Lorentz transformations (still not written
down by Lorentz) and showed that the FitzGerald-Lorentz contraction
was a consequence.
Lorentz wrote down the transformations, now
named after him, in a paper of 1899, being the third person
to write them down. He, like Larmor, showed that the FitzGerald-Lorentz
contraction was a consequence of the Lorentz transformations.
The most amazing article relating to special
relativity to be published before 1900 was a paper of Poincaré
La mesure du temps which appeared in 1898. In this paper Poincaré
says
... we have no direct intuition about the
equality of two time intervals.
The simultaneity of two events or the order of their succession,
as well as the equality of two time intervals, must be defined
in such a way that the statements of the natural laws be as
simple as possible.
By 1900 the concept of the ether as a material
substance was being questioned. Paul Drude wrote
The conception of an ether absolutely at rest is the most
simple and the most natural - at least if the ether is conceived
to be not a substance but merely space endowed with certain
physical properties.
Poincaré, in his opening address to the Paris Congress
in 1900, asked Does the ether really exist? In 1904 Poincaré
came very close to the theory of special relativity in an
address to the International Congress of Arts and Science
in St Louis. He pointed out that observers in different frames
will have clocks which will
... mark what on may call the local time. ... as demanded
by the relativity principle the observer cannot know whether
he is at rest or in absolute motion.
The year that special relativity finally came into existence
was 1905. June of 1905 was a good month for papers on relativity,
on the 5th June Poincaré communicated an important
work Sur la dynamique de l'electron while Einstein's first
paper on relativity was received on 30th June. Poincaré
stated that It seems that this impossibility of demonstrating
absolute motion is a general law of nature. After naming the
Lorentz transformations after Lorentz, Poincaré shows
that these transformations, together with the rotations, form
a group.
Einstein's paper is remarkable for the different approach
it takes. It is not presented as an attempt to explain experimental
results, it is presented because of its beauty and simplicity.
In the introduction Einstein says
... the introduction of a light-ether will
prove to be superfluous since, according to the view to be
developed here, neither will a space in absolute rest endowed
with special properties be introduced nor will a velocity
vector be associated with a point of empty space in which
electromagnetic processes take place.
Inertial frames are introduced which, by definition, are in
uniform motion with respect to each other. The whole theory
is based on two postulates:-
1. The laws of physics take the same form in all inertial
frames.
2. In any inertial frame, the velocity of light c is the same
whether the light is emitted by a body at rest or by a body
in uniform motion.
Einstein now deduced the Lorentz transformations from his
two postulates and, like Poincaré proves the group
property. Then the FitzGerald-Lorentz contraction is deduced.
Also in the paper Einstein mentions the clock paradox. Einstein
called it a theorem that if two synchronous clocks C1 and
C2 start at a point A and C2 leaves A moving along a closed
curve to return to A then C2 will run slow compared with C1.
He notes that no paradox results since C2 experiences acceleration
while C1 does not.
In September 1905 Einstein published a short but important
paper in which he proved the famous formula
E = mc2.
The first paper on special relativity, other than by Einstein,
was written in 1908 by Planck. It was largely due to the fact
that relativity was taken up by someone as important as Planck
that it became so rapidly accepted. At the time Einstein wrote
the 1905 paper he was still a technical expert third class
at the Bern patent office. Also in 1908 Minkowski published
an important paper on relativity, presenting the Maxwell-Lorentz
equations in tensor form. He also showed that the Newtonian
theory of gravitation was not consistent with relativity.
The main contributors to special relativity were undoubtedly
Lorentz, Poincaré and, of course, the founder of the
theory Einstein. It is therefore interesting to see their
respective reactions to the final formulation of the theory.
Einstein, although he spent many years thinking about how
to formulate the theory, once he had found the two postulates
they were immediately natural to him. Einstein was always
reluctant to acknowledge that the steps which others were
taking due to the Michelson-Morley experiment had any influence
on his thinking.
Poincaré's reaction to Einstein's 1905
paper was rather strange. When Poincaré lectured in
Göttingen in 1909 on relativity he did not mention Einstein
at all. He presented relativity with three postulates, the
third being the FitzGerald-Lorentz contraction. It is impossible
to believe that someone as brilliant as Poincaré had
failed to understand Einstein's paper. In fact Poincaré
never wrote a paper on relativity in which he mentioned Einstein.
Einstein himself behaved in a similar fashion and Poincaré
is only mentioned once in Einstein's papers. Lorentz, however,
was praised by both Einstein and Poincaré and often
cited in their work.
Lorentz himself poses a puzzle. Although he
clearly understood Einstein's papers, he did not ever seem
to accept their conclusions. He gave a lecture in 1913 when
he remarked how rapidly relativity had been accepted. He for
one was less sure.
As far as this lecturer is concerned he finds
a certain satisfaction in the older interpretation according
to which the ether possesses at least some substantiality,
space and time can be sharply separated, and simultaneity
without further specification can be spoken of. Finally it
should be noted that the daring assertion that one can never
observe velocities larger than the velocity of light contains
a hypothetical restriction of what is accessible to us, a
restriction which cannot be accepted without some reservation.
Despite Lorentz's caution the special theory of relativity
was quickly accepted. In 1912 Lorentz and Einstein were jointly
proposed for a Nobel prize for their work on special relativity.
The recommendation is by Wien, the 1911 winner, and states
... While Lorentz must be considered as the first to have
found the mathematical content of the relativity principle,
Einstein succeeded in reducing it to a simple principle. One
should therefore assess the merits of both investigators as
being comparable...
Einstein never received a Nobel prize for
relativity. The committee was at first cautious and waited
for experimental confirmation. By the time such confirmation
was available Einstein had moved on to further momentous work.
Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
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