Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity: Difference between revisions

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*Einstein developed a theory of motion that could consistently contain both the same speed of light for any observer and the familiar addition of velocities described above for slow-moving objects. This is called the special theory of relativity , since it deals with the relative motions of objects.
*Einstein developed a theory of motion that could consistently contain both the same speed of light for any observer and the familiar addition of velocities described above for slow-moving objects. This is called the special theory of relativity , since it deals with the relative motions of objects.


==Gamma==
==Gamma((Gamma Symbol))==
The measurable effects of relativity are based on gamma. Gamma depends only on the speed of a particle and is always larger than
 
1. By definition:c is the speed of light
v is the speed of the object in question
For example, when an electron has traveled ten feet along the accelerator it has a speed of 0.99 c , and the value of gamma at that speed is 7.09. When the electron reaches the end of the linac, its speed is 0.99999999995 c where gamma equals 100,000.
 
What do these gamma values tell us about the relativistic effects detected at SLAC? Notice that when the speed of the object is very much less than the speed of light ( v << c ), gamma is approximately equal to 1. This is a non-relativistic situation (Newtonian).


==Special Relativity in Dynamics==
==Special Relativity in Dynamics==
==Interesting Facts About Special Relativity==
==Interesting Facts About Special Relativity==

Revision as of 22:32, 28 November 2015

What is relativity? Succinctly put, it is the notion that the laws of physics are the same everywhere. We here on Earth obey the same laws of light and gravity as someone in a far off corner of the universe.
The universality of physics means that history is provincial. Different viewers will see the timing and spacing of events differently. What for us is a million years may just be a blink of an eye for someone flying in a high speed rocket or falling into a black hole.

It's all relative.

Definition

Speical Relativity

Special relativity came first and is based on the speed of light being constant for everyone. Einstein came to this conclusion in 1905 after experimental evidence showed that the speed of light didn't change as the Earth swung around the Sun. This result was surprising to physicists because the speed of most other things does depend on what direction the observer is moving.
Einstein said that all observers will measure the speed of light to be 186,000 miles per second, no matter how fast and what direction they are moving."If you are in a spaceship that is traveling at the speed of light, and you turn on the headlights, does anything happen?"
The answer is the headlights turn on normally, but only from the perspective of someone inside the spaceship. For someone standing outside watching the ship fly by, the headlights do not appear to turn on: light comes out but it takes an eternity for the beams to get ahead of the spaceship.
These contradictory versions arise because rulers and clocks —If the speed of light is to be held constant as Einstein said, then time and space cannot be absolute; they must be subjective. For instance, a 100-foot-long spaceship traveling at 99.99 percent the speed of light will appear one foot long to a stationary observer, but it will remain its normal length for those onboard.
Perhaps even weirder, time passes slower the faster one goes. If a twin rides in the speeding spaceship to some distant star and then comes back, she will be younger than her sister who stayed on Earth.
Mass, too, depends on speed. The faster an object moves, the more massive it becomes. In fact, no spaceship can ever reach 100 percent of the speed of light because its mass would grow to infinity. This relationship between mass and speed is often expressed as a relationship between mass and energy: E=mc^2, where E is energy, m is mass and c is the speed of light.

Relativistic Definitnios

  • Physicists call particles with v/c comparable to 1 "relativistic" particles. Particles with v/c << 1 (very much less than one) are "non-relativistic." At SLAC, we are almost always dealing with relativistic particles. Below we catalogue some essential differences between the relativistic quantities the more familiar non-relativistic or low-speed approximate definitions and behaviors.

Occurrence

Theoritical Basis for Special Relativity

Einstein's theory of special relativity results from two statements -- the two basic postulates of special relativity:

  1. The speed of light is the same for all observers, no matter what their relative speeds.
  2. The laws of physics are the same in any inertial (that is, non-accelerated) frame of reference. This means that the laws of physics observed by a hypothetical observer traveling with a relativistic particle must be the same as those observed by an observer who is stationary in the laboratory.

Given these two statements, Einstein showed how definitions of momentum and energy must be refined and how quantities such as length and time must change from one observer to another in order to get consistent results for physical quantities such as particle half-life. To decide whether his postulates are a correct theory of nature, physicists test whether the predictions of Einstein's theory match observations. Indeed many such tests have been made -- and the answers Einstein gave are right every time!

The speed of light is the same for all observers, no matter what their relative speeds

  • The first postulate -- the speed of light will be seen to be the same relative to any observer, independent of the motion of the observer -- is the crucial idea that led Einstein to formulate his theory. It means we can define a quantity c , the speed of light, which is a fundamental constant of nature.
  • Note that this is quite different from the motion of ordinary, massive objects. If I am driving down the freeway at 50 miles per hour relative to the road, a car traveling in the same direction at 55 mph has a speed of only 5 mph relative to me, while a car coming in the opposite direction at 55 mph approaches me at a rate of 105 mph. Their speed relative to me depends on my motion as well as on theirs.

The laws of physics are the same in any inertial (that is, non-accelerated) frame of reference

  • This second postulate is really a basic though unspoken assumption in all of science -- the idea that we can formulate rules of nature which do not depend on our particular observing situation. This does not mean that things behave in the same way on the earth and in space, e.g. an observer at the surface of the earth is affected by the earth's gravity, but it does mean that the effect of a force on an object is the same independent of what causes the force and also of where the object is or what its speed is.
  • Einstein developed a theory of motion that could consistently contain both the same speed of light for any observer and the familiar addition of velocities described above for slow-moving objects. This is called the special theory of relativity , since it deals with the relative motions of objects.

Gamma((Gamma Symbol))

The measurable effects of relativity are based on gamma. Gamma depends only on the speed of a particle and is always larger than

1. By definition:c is the speed of light v is the speed of the object in question For example, when an electron has traveled ten feet along the accelerator it has a speed of 0.99 c , and the value of gamma at that speed is 7.09. When the electron reaches the end of the linac, its speed is 0.99999999995 c where gamma equals 100,000.

What do these gamma values tell us about the relativistic effects detected at SLAC? Notice that when the speed of the object is very much less than the speed of light ( v << c ), gamma is approximately equal to 1. This is a non-relativistic situation (Newtonian).

Special Relativity in Dynamics

Interesting Facts About Special Relativity