Special relativity
Special relativity(SR) or the special theory of relativity is the physical theory published in 1905 by Albert Einstein. It replaced Newtonian notions of space and time and incorporated electromagnetism as represented by Maxwell's equations. The theory is called "special" because it is a special case of Einstein's theory of relativity where the effects of gravity can be ignored. Ten years later, Einstein published the theory of general relativity which incorporates gravitation.
History and motivation
Main article: History of special relativity
The principle of relativity was introduced by Galileo. Overturning the old absolutist views of Aristotle, it held that motion, or at least uniform motion in a straight line, only had meaning relative to something else, and that there was no absolute reference frame by which all things could be measured.
The principle of relativity seemed to work well for everyday phenomena involving solid objects, but light was still problematic. Mechanical waves travel in a medium, and so it was assumed for light. This hypothetical medium was called the "luminiferous aether." The idea of an aether seemed to reintroduce the idea of a detectable absolute frame of reference, one that is stationary with respect to the aether.
After Maxwell's unification of light, electricity, and magnetism, and after experimental evidence such as Michelson-Morley experiment, a consensus emerged that the speed of light does not vary with the speed of the observer, and the speed of light must be invariant (the same) for all observers. This seemed to further conflict with the principle of relativity. Hendrik Lorentz proposed a resolution by postulating an aether theory in which objects and observers travelling with respect to a stationary aether underwent a physical shortening (Lorentz-Fitzgerald contraction) and a change in temporal rate (time dilation). Poincaré's version of the relativity principle (1904) went: "The laws of physical phenomenons must be the same, whether for a fixed observer, as also for one dragged in a motion of uniform translation, so that we do not and cannot have any mean to discern whether or not we are dragged in a such motion."
Einstein's contribution was, inter alia, to derive Lorentz's equations from a more fundamental principle without assuming the presence of an aether. Under Special Relativity, the seemingly complex transformations of Lorentz and Fitzgerald derived cleanly from simple geometry and the Pythagorean theorem. The original title for his theory was (translated from German) "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies". Max Planck first suggested the term "relativity" to highlight the notion of transforming the laws of physics between observers moving relative to one another.
Postulates
Main article: Postulates of special relativity
1. First postulate (principle of relativity)
- The laws of electrodynamics and optics will be valid for all frames in which the laws of mechanics hold good.
- Every physical theory should look the same mathematically to every inertial observer.
- The laws of physics are independent of location space or time.
- The speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted c, is the same to all inertial observers, is the same in all directions, and does not depend on the velocity of the object emitting the light. When combined with the First Postulate, this Second Postulate is equivalent to stating that light does not require any medium (such as "aether") in which to propagate.
Status
Main article: Status of special relativity
Special relativity is only accurate when gravitational effects are negligible or very weak, otherwise it must be replaced by general relativity. At very small scales, such as at the Planck length and below, it is also possible that special relativity breaks down, due to the effects of quantum gravity. However, at macroscopic scales and in the absence of strong gravitational fields, special relativity is now universally accepted by the physics community and experimental results which appear to contradict it are widely believed to be due to unreproducible experimental error.
Because of the freedom one has to select how one defines units of length and time in physics, it is possible to make one of the two postulates of relativity a tautological consequence of the definitions, but one cannot do this for both postulates simultaneously, as when combined they have consequences which are independent of one's choice of definition of length and time.
Special relativity is mathematically self-consistent, and is also compatible with all modern physical theories, most notably quantum field theory, string theory, and general relativity (in the limiting case of negligible gravitational fields). However special relativity is incompatible with several earlier theories, most notably Newtonian mechanics. See Status of special relativity for a more detailed discussion.
A number of experiments have been conducted to test special relativity against rival theories. These include:
- The Michelson-Morley experiment disproved the possibility of ether drift, and tested the directional invariance of the speed of light
- Hamar experiment - obstruction of ether flow
- Trouton-Noble experiment - torque on a capacitor
- Kennedy-Thorndike experiment - time contraction
- Rossi-Hall experiment - spacetime contraction's effects on a fast-moving particle's half-life
- Experiments to test emitter theory demonstrated that the speed of light is independent of the speed of the emitter.
Consequences
Main article: Consequences of Special Relativity
Special relativity leads to different physical predictions than Galilean relativity when relative velocities become comparable to the speed of light. The speed of light is so much larger than anything humans encounter that some of the effects predicted by relativity are initially counter intuitive.
- The time lapse between two events is not invariant from observer to another, but is dependent on the relative speeds of the observers' reference frames. (See Lorentz transformation equations)
- Two events that occur simultaneously in different places in one frame of reference may occur at different times in another frame of reference (lack of absolute simultaneity).
- The dimensions (e.g. length) of an object as measured by one observer may differ from the results of measurements of the same object made by another observer. (See Lorentz transformation equations)
- The twin paradox concerns a twin who flies off in a spaceship travelling near the speed of light. When he returns he discovers that his twin has aged much more rapidly than he has (or he aged more slowly).
- The ladder paradox involves a long ladder travelling near the speed of light and being contained within a smaller garage.
Lack of an absolute reference frame
Special Relativity rejects the idea of any absolute ('unique' or 'special') frame of reference; rather physics must look the same to all observers travelling at a constant velocity (inertial frame). This 'principle of relativity' dates back to Galileo, and is incorporated into Newtonian Physics. In the late 19th Century, some physicists suggested that the universe was filled with a substance known as "aether" which transmited Electromagnetic waves. Aether constituted an absolute reference frame against which speeds could be measured. Aether had some wonderful properties: it was sufficiently elastic that it could support electromagnetic waves, those waves could interact with matter, yet it offered no resistance to bodies passing through it. The results of various experiments, including the Michelson-Morley experiment, suggested that the Earth was always 'stationary' relative to the Aether - something that is difficult to explain. The most elegant solution was to discard the notion of Aether and an absolute frame, and to adopt Einstein's postulates.
Mass, momentum, and energy
In addition to modifying notions of space and time, special relativity forces one to reconsider the concepts of mass, momentum, and energy, all of which are important constructs in Newtonian mechanics. Special relativity shows, in fact, that these concepts are all different aspects of the same physical quantity in much the same way that it shows space and time to be interrelated.
There are a couple of (equivalent) ways to define momentum and energy in SR. One method uses conservation laws. If these laws are to remain valid in SR they must be true in every possible reference frame. However, if one does some simple thought experiments using the Newtonian definitions of momentum and energy one sees that these quantities are not conserved in SR. One can rescue the idea of conservation by making some small modifications to the definitions to account for relativistic velocities. It is these new definitions which are taken as the correct ones for momentum and energy in SR.
Given an object of invariant mass m_0 traveling at velocity u the energy and momentum are given by
and the four-velocity
as
For velocities much smaller than those of light γ can be approximated using a Taylor series expansion and one finds that
Looking at the above formulas for energy, one sees that when an object is at rest (u = 0 and γ = 1) there is a non-zero energy remaining:
Taking this formula at face value, we see that in relativity, mass is simply another form of energy. This formula becomes important when one measures the masses of different atomic nuclei. By looking at the difference in masses, one can predict which nuclei have extra stored energy which can be released by nuclear reactions, providing important information which was useful in the development of the nuclear bomb. The implications of this formula on 20th century life has made it one of the most famous equations in all of science.
On mass
Introdutory physics courses and some older textbooks on special relativity sometimes define a so-called relativistic mass which may lead to the mistaken impression that special relativity implies the mass of a body increases as its velocity increases. This is technically incorrect from a theoretical standpoint since the first postulate was used to construct a theory in which the properties of an object are independent of any inertial frame, i.e., invariant.
Nevertheless, defining such a quantity may sometimes be useful in that
doing so simplifies a calculation by restricting it to a specific frame. For
example, consider an obsever who considers himself at rest and a body with an
invariant mass, :
moving at some velocity relative to that
observer. That observer defines the relativistic mass of that body as:
Simultaneity and causality
Special relativity holds that events that are simultaneous in one frame of reference need not be simultaneous in another frame of reference.
The interval AB in the diagram to the right is 'time-like'. I.e. there is a frame of reference in which event A and event B occur at the same location in space, separated only by occurring at different times. If A precedes B in that frame, then A precedes B in all frames. It is hypothetically possible for matter (or information) to travel from A to B, so there can be a causal relationship (with A the cause and B the effect).
The interval AC in the diagram is 'space-like'. I.e. there is a frame of reference in which event A and event C occur simultaneously, separated only in space. However there are also frames in which A precedes C (as shown) and frames in which C precedes A. Barring some way of traveling faster than light, it is not possible for any matter (or information) to travel from A to C or from C to A. Thus there is no causal connection between A and C.
The geometry of space-time
SR uses a 'flat' 4-dimensional Minkowski space, which is an example of a space-time. This space, however, is very similar to the standard 3 dimensional Euclidean space, and fortunately by that fact, very easy to work with.
The differential of distance(ds) in cartesian 3D space is defined as:
are the differentials of the three spatial dimensions. In the geometry of special relativity, a fourth dimension, time, is added, with units of c, so that the equation for the differential of distance becomes:










