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64741
OUP- 880-5-8-74-10,000.
OSMANIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Call
No.
^''l
Accession No.
Author
This book should be returned on
of
before the date last
marke4
/>eiow,
THE EINSTEIN
THEORY
OF RELATIVITY
Boofcs
by L
/?.
ancf H. G. Lieber
NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY GALOIS AND THE THEORY OF GROUPS THE EDUCATION OF
MITS
C.
T.
THE EINSTEIN THEORY OF RELATIVITY MITS,
WITS
AND LOGIC
INFINITY
Books of drawings by H. G. Lieber
GOODBYE
MR.
MAN, HELLO MR. NEWMAN
(WITH INTRODUCTION BY
L.
R.
LIEBER)
COMEDIE INTERNATIONALE
THE EINSTEIN
THEORY
OF RELATIVITY Text By
LILLIAN
R.
LIEBER
Drawings By
HUGH GRAY
LIEBER
HOLT, RINEHART
New
AND WINSTON
York / Chicago / San Francisco
Copyright, 1936, 1945, by
L.
R.
and
H. G. Lieber
All rights reserved, including the right to repro-
duce In
of
this
book or portions thereof in any form. Holt, Rinehart and Winston
Canada, Canada,
Limited.
First Edition
October 1945 Second Printing, April 1946 Third Printing, November 1946 Fourth Printing, November 1947 Fifth Printing, May 1950 S/xtfi Printing, March 1954 Seventh Printing, November 1 957 Eighth Printing, July 1958 Ninth Printing, July 1959 Tenth Printing, April 1960 Eleventh Printing, April 1961 Twelfth Printing, April 1964 Thirteenth Printing, November 1966 Firsf Printing,
1975
85251-0115 Printed in the United States of America
To
FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT who saved
the world from those forces
of evil which sought to destroy
Art and Science and the very Dignity of
Man.
PREFACE In
this
book on
the Einstein Theory of Relativity
the attempt is made to introduce just enough
mathematics to
HELP
NOT to HINDER
and
the lay reader/ "lay" can of course apply to various domains of knowledge
perhaps then
we should
say:
the layman in Relativity.
Many
"popular" discussions of
Relativity,
without any mathematics at have been written. But we doubt whether
all,
even the best of these can possibly give to a novice an adequate idea of
what
What in
it is
all
about.
very clear when expressed mathematical language is
sounds "mystical"
in
ordinary language.
On
the other hand,
there are
many
discussions,
including Einstein's own papers, which are accessible to the
experts only. vii
We
believe that
there
is
a class of readers
who
can get very little out of either of these two kinds of discussion readers who
know enough about
mathematics to follow a simple mathematical presentation of a domain new to them, built from the ground up, with sufficient details to bridge the gaps that exist
FOR THEM
in
both
the popular and the expert presentations. This book is an attempt to satisfy the needs of this
kind of reader.
viii
CONTENTS PREFACE Part
I.
II.
III.
I
-THE
SPECIAL THEORY
INTRODUCTION
3
The Michelson-Morley Experiment
8
IV. The
V. The
Remedy
31
Solution of the Difficulty
39
VI. The Result of Applying the VII.
VIII.
20
Re-Examination of the Fundamental Ideas
The
Four-Dimensional tinuum
Some Consequences
44
Remedy
Space-Time
Con-
57
of the Theory of
69
Relativity
IX.
A
Point of Logic and a
83
Summary
87
The Moral Part
A
II
-THE GENERAL THEORY
GUIDE TO PART
91
II
95
X. Introduction
101
XI. The Principle of Equivalence XII. XIII.
A
107
Non-Euclidean World!
113
The Study of Spaces
XIV. What
XV. The
Is
127
a Tensor?
Effect
on Tensors
of a
Change
Coordinate System
XVI.
A Very Helpful Simplification ix
in the 1
41
150
160
XVII. Operations with TenseXVIII.
A Physical
167
Illustration
XIX. Mixed Tensors
XX.
Contraction and Differentiation
XXI. The XXII. XXIII.
Our
Last Detour
200
at Last
the Curvature Tensor?
206
Einstein's
Law
of Gravitation
21 3
of Einstein's
Law
of Gravitation
Is
The Big G's or
219
with Newton's
XXVII.
How
Can the
Einstein
Law
of Gravitation Be
227
Tested?
XXVIII. Surmounting the
XXIX. "The Proof
Difficulties
237
Pudding"
255
the Path of a Planet
266
of the
XXX. More About
XXXI. The Perihelion
272
of Mercury
XXXII.
Deflection of a
Ray
XXXIII.
Deflection of a
Ray of
XXXIV. The
78
191
The Curvature Tensor
XXVI. Comparison
1
187
Little g's
XXIV. Of What Use
XXV.
173
of Light Light, cont.
Third of the "Crucial"
Phenomena
XXXV. Summary
283
289 299 303
The Moral
Would You Like
THE ATOMIC
276
to
Know?
BOMB
310 318
Parti
THE SPECIAL THEORY
INTRODUCTION.
I.
In order to appreciate the fundamental importance
of Relativity, it is
how
necessary to it
Whenever in
know
arose. 11
a "revolution
takes place,
any domain, always preceded by
it is
some maladjustment producing
a tension,
which ultimately causes a break, followed by a greater stability at least for the
time being.
What was
the maladjustment in Physics the latter part of the 19th century, which led to the creation of in
11
the "revolutionary
Let us summarize It
Relativity
it
Theory?
briefly:
has been assumed that
space is filled with ether,* through which radio waves and all
light
waves
are transmitted
any modern child *This ether
is
talks quite glibly
of course
NOT the
chemical ether
which surgeons use! ft is it
not a liquid, solid, or gas,
has never been seen
by anybody,
presence is only conjectured because of the need for some medium to transmit radio and light waves. its
3
11
about "wave-lengths in connection with the radio.
Now,
there
if
is
an ether,
does it surround the earth and travel with it, or does it remain stationary while the earth travels through it?
Various known (acts* indicate that the ether does
NOT travel
with the earth.
THROUGH
the earth is moving If, then, there must be an "ether wind/'
person riding on a bicycle
just as a
through feels an
still air,
air
wind blowing
in his face.
And
so an experiment was performed and Morley (see p. 8) Michelson by in 1887, to detect this ether wind/and much to the surprise of everyone, no ether wind was observed.
unexpected result was explained by Dutch physicist, Lorentz, in 1 895, in a way which will be described
This a
in
Chapter
II.
The search for the ether wind was then resumed by means of other kinds of experiments.! *See the
by A. in
M article
Aberration of Light",
S.
Eddington, the Encyclopedia Britannica, 14th ed.
tSec the article "Relativity" by James Jeans, also in the Enc. Brit. 14th ed.
4
the ether,
But, again and again, to the consternation of the physicists, no ether wind could be detected,' until
it
seemed
that 1
nature was in a "conspiracy' to prevent our finding this effect!
At
this
point
Einstein took
and decided
up the problem, that 11
a natural "conspiracy must be a natural
LAW
And
operating. to answer the question
what is he proposed
as to
his Theory of two papers, 1905 and the other
in
Relativity,
in
published
one
this law,
in
1915.*
He first found it necessary to re-examine the fundamental ideas upon which classical physics was based, and proposed certain vital changes in them. He
then
made
A
VERY LIMITED NUMBER OF MOST REASONABLE ASSUMPTIONS
from which he deduced his theory. So fruitful did his analysis prove to be that
by means
of
it
he succeeded
in:
(1) Clearing up the fundamental ideas. (2) Explaining the Michelson-Morley experiment in a much more rational way than
had previously been done. *Both
now
published
in
one volume
including also the papers
by
Lorentz and Minkowski, to which
see
we
SOME
shall refer later/
INTERESTING READING, page 324.
Doing away with
(3)
other outstanding difficulties in physics. (4) Deriving a
NEW LAW OF GRAVITATION
much more adequate than the Newtonian one (See Part II.: The General Theory) and which led to several important predictions
which could be verified by experiment; and which have been so verified since then.
(5) Explaining
QUITE INCIDENTALLY a famous discrepancy in astronomy which had worried the astronomers for
many
(This also
years is discussed in
The General Theory). Thus, the Theory of Relativity had a profound philosophical bearing of physics, on as well as explaining
ALL
many SPECIFIC that
outstanding difficulties
had seemed to be entirely
UNRELATED, and
of further increasing our of the physical world by suggesting a number of
NEW experiments which NEW discoveries. No
knowledge
have led to
other physical theory
been so powerful though based on so FEW assumptions. has
As we
shall see.
THE MICHELSON-MORLEY EXPERIMENT*
II.
On
page 4 we referred to
the problem that
Michelson and Morley Let us
now
set themselves.
see
what experiment they performed and what was the startling result. In
order to get the idea of the experiment
very clearly it
will
in
mind,
be helpful
first
to consider the following simple problem,
which can be solved
by any boy who
has studied
elementary algebra:
Imagine a river in which there is a current flowing with velocity v, in the direction indicated
by the
Now
which would take longer
for a
man
From
A
to
to
'Published
swim
B and back in
arrow:
to
A
,
the
Philosophical Magazine, vol. 24, (1887).
8
or
from if
A
C and back
to
the distances
AB
to
A
,
AB and AC are
equal,
being parallel to the current,
AC perpendicular to it? Let the man's rate of swimming
and
in still
be represented by c / then, when swimming against the from
A
his rate
8
to
water
current,
,
would be only
v
c
f
whereas,
when swimming with from 8 back to A , his rate
the current,
+
would, of course, be c
v.
Therefore the time required to swim from A to fi
would be a/(c v), where a represents the distance and the time required for the trip
from
would be a/(c
8
+
to
A
v).
Consequently, the time for the round
ti
or
Now
ti
let us
= =
trip
-
a/(c
2
2ac/(c
would be
/)
-
+ v
a/(c
+
v)
2
).
see
how
long the round
from
A
to
AB ;
trip
C and back
to
A
would take. If he headed directly toward C , the current would carry him downstream, and he would land at some point to the left of C in the figure on p. 8. Therefore, in order to arrive at
C
,
9
he should head just far
for
some point
D
enough upstream
to counteract the effect of the current.
In
other words, the water could
be kept
until
he swam
own
from
A
if
to
D
at his
still
rate c
,
and then the current were suddenly allowed to operate, carrying him at the rate v from D to C (without his making any further effort), then the effect would obviously be the same as his going directly from
A
iojC 2
2
with a velocity equal to Vc' v/ as is obvious from the right triangle:
ex
\r
Consequently/ the time required for the journey from
A
to
C
2
would be a/Vc^- v , where a is the distance from Similarly, in
going back from C to easy to see that,
A,
it is
10
A
to
C
method
the same
by
of reasoning, 2
_
the time would again be a/Vc Hence the time for the round trip
from
A
to
C and back
would be fa
In
let us write ft for
Then we
get: ti
and
fa
=
c/
ti
2
.
_ A,
to
= 2a/vV -
order to compare
v
and
Vc
f-
2
v
y\
more
easily,
2 .
2
2a/3
/c
2a/3/c.
Assuming that v is less than c , 2 2 v being obviously less than and c
Vc
the
2
v
2
is
therefore less than c
and consequently ft is greater than (since the denominator is
less than
Therefore that IT
t\
the numerator). is greater than
1
c
2
,
,
^
fa ,
is,
TAKES LONGER TO
SWIM UPSTREAM AND BACK
THAN TO SWIM THE SAME DISTANCE ACROSS-STREAM
AND
BACK.
But what has all this to do with the Michelson-Morley experiment? In that experiment, to B: a ray of light was sent from
A
C-r
^-
HB 11
At 8 there was a mirror which reflected the light back to so that the ray of light makes the round trip from just as the
A,
AioB and
back,
swimmer did
the problem described above. since the entire apparatus shares the motion of the earth, in
Now,
which is moving through space, supposedly through a stationary ether/ thus creating an ether wind in the opposite direction, (namely, the direction indicated above), this experiment seems entirely analogous to the problem of the swimmer.
And,
therefore/ as before/ ti
and
ti
= 2a0Yc = 2a|S/c.
0) (2)
is now the velocity of light, the time required for the light to C and back to to go from
Where
and
c
*2 is
A
A
(being reflected from another mirror at If/ ti
Q.
therefore, and t> are found experimentally/
then
by dividing (1) the value of /? would
And
since
by (2), be easily obtained.
= c/V c
2
-T
2 ,
c being the known velocity of light, the value of v could be calculated.
That
is,
THE ABSOLUTE VELOCITY
OF THE EARTH
would thus become known. Such was the plan of the experiment.
Now
what actually happened?
12
The experimental values of t\ and were found to be the SAME, instead of
ti
ti
being greater than ti was a most disturbing \
this
Obviously
result,
quite out of harmony with the reasoning given above.
The Dutch
physicist, Lorentz, then suggested the following explanation of Michelson's strange result:
Lorentz suggested that matter,
owing
and
this
to
its
WHEN
SHRINKS
electrical structure, IT
IS
MOVING,
contraction occurs
ONLY IN THE DIRECTION OF of shrinkage The he assumes to be in the ratio of 1/ff
MOTION.*
AMOUNT
2
v (where /3 has the value c/Vc Thus a sphere of one inch radius ellipsoid when shortest semi-axis
becomes an with
its
(now only
it is
2
,
as before).
moving,
1//3 inches long)
*The two papers by Lorentz on this subject are included in the volume mentioned in the footnote on page 5. In the first of these papers Lorentz mentions that the explanation proposed here occurred also to Fitzgerald.
Hence
it
is
often referred to as
the "Fitzgerald contraction" or the "Lorentz contraction* or 1
11
the "Lorentz-Fitzgerald contraction.
13
in
the direction of motion,
thus:
a erection
Applying this idea Michelson-Morlcy experiment,
to the
the distance
AB (=
on
a)
becomes a/jS , and ti becomes 2a/3/c
p. 8,
/
2
instead of 2a/3 /c , so that now ft t2
=
just as the
One
,
experiment requires.
might ask
how
it is
that Michelson did not
observe the shrinkage? Why did not his measurements show that
AB was
shorter than
AC
(See the figure on p. 8)? The obvious answer is that the measuring rod itself contracts
when applied to AB, so that one is not aware of the shrinkage. To
this
explanation
of the
Michelson-Morley experiment the natural objection may be raised that an explanation for the express
which
is
purpose
14
invented
of smoothing out a certain and assumes a correction of is
JUST too
And
difficulty,
the right amount, to be satisfying.
artificial
Poincare, the French mathematician/
raised this very natural objection.
Consequently, Lorentz undertook to examine his contraction
hypothesis
other connections, to see whether it is in harmony also with facts other than in
the Michelson-Morley experiment. He then published a second paper
in
1904,
giving the result of this investigation.
To present let us
first
this result in a clear
re-state the
form
argument
as follows:
vt
T
Consider a set of axes, X and Y, supposed to be fixed in the stationary ether, and another set X' and Y' , attached to the earth and moving with it,
15
with velocity v
X
Let
and
7
V"
Now
,
as indicated
move along X, move parallel to
above
V.
suppose an observer on the
earth,
say Michelson, is
trying to
the time
measure
takes a ray of light to B , to travel from it
A
A
and 8 being fixed points on the moving axis X . both
r
At
the
moment
when the
ray of light
starts at
A
f
that
Y and Y
suppose coincide, and A coincides with D / and while the light has been traveling to B the axis
V
moved
has
the distance vt
,
and B has reached the position shown in the figure on p. 1 5, t
being the time
it
takes for this to happen.
DB = x and AB =
Then, we have x' if
=
x
x',
vt.
(3)
only another way of expressing what was said on p. where the time for
This
is
first part of the journey was said to be equal to a/(c
9
the
And, as we saw there, this way of thinking of did
NOT agree
Applying now
the
v).*
phenomenon
with the experimental facts. the contraction hypothesis
we are now designating a by x', = t , or x = ct we have x'/(c v)
*Since
vf.
But the distance the light has traveled is x , and x
=
ct,
consequently x'
=x-
vt
is
16
equivalent to a/(c
v)
=
t.
proposed by Lorentz, x should be divided by /3, so that equation (3) becomes r
x7/3 or
x'
Now
- vt - vt). (x
=
x
=
when Lorentz examined
as stated
on
1
p.
(4)
other fads,
5,
he found that equation (4) was quite in harmony with ail these but that he was now obliged
facts,
to introduce a further correction
expressed by the equation (5)
where /3 , t , v , x , and c have the same meaning as before But what is t?! Surely the time measurements in the two systems are not different:
Whether the
origin
is
at
D
or at
A
should not affect the
TIME-READINGS. In t'
other words, as Lorentz saw it, 11 sort of "artificial time
was a
introduced only for mathematical reasons,
because in
it
helped to give
harmony with the
But obviously
NO As
had
t
results
facts.
for
him
PHYSICAL MEANING.
Jeans, the English physicist, puts
"If the observer
it:
could be persuaded
to measure time in this
artificial way, wrong to begin with and then making them gain or lose permanently, the effect of his supposed artificiality
setting his clocks
17
would
just
counterbalance
the effects of his motion 11
through the ether
!*
Thus, the equations finally proposed
by Lorentz
are:
Note
x'
=
z'
=
(x
-
vt)
that
since the axes attached to the earth (p. are moving along the X-axis,
1
5)
obviously the values of y and z (z
being the third dimension)
are the
same
The equations are
known
/
and z
just
given
as
,
respectively.
as
THE LORENTZ TRANSFORMATION, since they show how to transform a set of values of x , y , z , t into a set x',
y, z,
t'
coordinate system moving with constant velocity in a
v,
along the X-axis, with respect to the
unprimed coordinate system.
And,
as
we
saw,
whereas the Lorentz transformation really expressed the facts correctly, it seemed to have
NO
PHYSICAL MEANING,
*See the
article
on
Relativity in the
Encyclopedia Britannica, 14th edition.
19
and was merely a set of empirical equations.
Let us
now
see what Einstein did.
RE-EXAMINATION OF THE
III.
FUNDAMENTAL
IDEAS.
As Einstein regarded the situation, the negative result of the Michelson-Morley experiment, as well as of other experiments
which seemed to indicate a "conspiracy" on the part of nature against man's efforts to obtain knowledge of the physical world (see p. 5),
these negative results,
according to Einstein, did not merely demand explanations of a certain number of isolated difficulties,
but the situation was so serious that a
complete examination
of fundamental ideas
was necessary. In
he
other words, felt that there was something
fundamentally and radically wrong in
physics,
rather than a
And
mere
superficial difficulty.
so he undertook to re-examine
such fundamental notions as
our ideas of
LENGTH
and
TIME and MASS.
His exceedingly reasonable examination
20
is
most illuminating,
as
we
But
shall
first
why
now
let us
see.
remind the reader
and mass
length, time
are fundamental,
Everyone knows
that
VELOCITY depends upon the distance (or LENGTH) traversed in a given
TIME,
hence the unit of velocity
DEPENDS UPON the units of
LENGTH
and TIME.
Similarly,
since acceleration
is
the change in velocity in a unit of time, hence the unit of acceleration
DEPENDS UPON the units of velocity and time, and therefore ultimately upon the units of
LENGTH
and TIME.
Further,
since force
is
measured
by the product
of
mass and acceleration, the unit of force
DEPENDS UPON the units of mass and acceleration,
and hence ultimately the units of
MASS, LENGTH And so on. In all
upon
and TIME,
other words,
measurements
depend
in
MASS, LENGTH That
is
physics
primarily on
and TIME.
why 21
the system of units ordinarily used is called the "C.G.S."
where C stands
for
system,^ "centimeter"
(the unit of length), stands for "gram" (the unit of mass), and 5 stands for "second" (the unit of time)/
G
these being the fundamental units from which all the others are derived.
Let us
now
return to
Einstein's re-examination of
these fundamental units.
Suppose
that
two observers
wish to compare their measurements of time. If they are near each other
they can, of course/ look and compare them.
at
each other's watches
If they are far apart/ they can still compare each other's readings
BY
MEANS OF
SIGNALS,
say light signals or radio signals/ 1 that is/ any "electromagnetic wave* which can travel through space. Let us/ therefore/ imagine that
one observer/ f , is on the earth/ and the other/ 5 / on the sun/ and imagine that signals are sent as follows:
By his own watch/ 5 sends a message to which reads "twelve o'clock/" f receives this message say/ eight minutes later;* *Since the sun is about from the earth,
93 000 000
miles
light travels about 186 000 miles per second, the time for a light (or radio) signal to travel from the sun to the earth/
and
is
approximately eight minutes.
22
now, it
if
when
his
watch agrees with that of S n f
+
2
y
= (xj 67
+
(yj
(although x does
and y does in
So,
NOT
NOT
equal equal /).
x',
three dimensions,
x2
+
2
y
+
z
2
= (x7
+
(yj
+
(zj
and, similarly, as we have seen on p. 66, the "interval" between two events, in our four-dimensional
space-time world of events, remains the same, no matter which of the two observers,
K or
/C',
measures That
is
it.
to say,
although K and K' do not agree on some things/ as, for
example/ and time measurements, agree on other things:
their length
they (1) (2)
DO
The statement of their LAWS (see The "interval" between events,
p,
51)
Etc.
In other words/ although length and time
are
no longer
INVARIANTS,
the Einstein theory, other quantities, in
like the
ARE
space-time interval between two events,
invariants
in this
theory.
These
invariants are the quantities
68
which have the
SAME
value
for all observers,*
and may therefore be regarded as the realities of the universe.
Thus, from this point of view, the things that we see or measure
NOT
are the realities, since various observers
do not of the
get the same measurements same objects,
but rather certain mathematical relationships
between the measurements 2 2 2 2 r ) z (Like x y
+
+
+
are the realities, since they are the
same
for all observers.*
We in
shall see,
discussing
The General Theory of
how
Relativity,
fruitful
Minkowski's view-point of a four-dimensional Space-Time
World
proved to be.
VIII.
SOME CONSEQUENCES OF THE THEORY OF
We if
RELATIVITY.
have seen that
two observers,
K and K , move f
relatively to each other
*Ail observers moving relatively to each other with
UNIFORM
velocity (see p. 56).
69
with constant velocity, measurements of length and time
their
are different;
and, on page 29,
we promised In this
also to
show
measurements of mass are
that their
chapter
we
different.
shall discuss
mass measurements, as well as other
measurements which
depend upon these fundamental ones.
We
already
know
that
if
an object moves
direction parallel to the relative motion of K and in a
K
,
then the Lorentz transformation gives the relationship
between the length and time measurements of K and K'.
We
also
in a
direction
know
that
PERPENDICULAR motion of K and K
to
f
the relative there
is
NO difference
LENGTH and,
in
the
measurements (See footnote on
p. 50),
in this case,
the relationship between the time measurements may be found as follows:
For this
PERPENDICULAR
direction
Michelson argued that the time would be t2
= 2a/c
(seep. 12).
Now is
this argument supposed to be from the point of view
of an observer
DOES take
who
the motion into account,
70
and hence already contains the "correction" factor /}/ hence, replacing to by t'f the expression t' = 2a/3/c represents the time in
the perpendicular direction
as
K tells
K SHOULD be written. it
K
Whereas
,
in his
own
system,
would, of course, write
=
t
2a/c
for his "true" time,
t.
Therefore t'
=
|8f
gives the relationship sought above, from the point of view of K.
From a
this
we
see that
body moving
with velocity u
PERPENDICULAR appear to K and K to
in this
direction,
will
have
different velocities:
Thus,
Since u
=
where
and
c/
d/t and
=
u'
c/'/f'
represent the distance traversed by the object