Chapter 37 Relativity is an important subject that looks at the measurement of where and when events take place, and how these events are measured in reference.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ON TIME An Introduction into the theory behind Albert Einsteins Special Relativity.
Advertisements

Classical Relativity Galilean Transformations
Physics Lecture Resources
relativity Quantum Classic physics Modern physics.
Lecture 28: TUE 04 MAY 2010 Physics 2102 Jonathan Dowling Ch. 37 Einstein’s Theory of Relativity Ch. 38: Ch. 38: Photons and Matter Waves.
Classical Doppler Shift Anyone who has watched auto racing on TV is aware of the Doppler shift. As a race car approaches the camera, the sound of its engine.
Lecture 13 Space Time Diagrams ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.
Postulates of Special Relativity The Relativity Postulate –The laws of physics are the same in every inertial reference frame The Speed of Light Postulate.
Theory of Special Relativity
P1X*Dynamics & Relativity : Newton & Einstein Chris Parkes October 2005 Special Relativity Postulates Time Dilation Length Contraction Lorentz Transformation.
Cutnell/Johnson Physics 7th edition
Phy107 Fall 2006 From last time… Einstein’s Relativity ◦ All laws of physics identical in inertial ref. frames ◦ Speed of light=c in all inertial ref.
 PROGRAM OF “PHYSICS2B” Lecturer: Dr. DO Xuan Hoi Room A1. 413
Special Relativity Lecture 24 F2013 The Postulates Phenomenology The proper frame Time Length Mass energy Measuring events Lorentz transformations 1.
1 Special Relativity (Ch 37) Modern physics special relativity quantum mechanics Both were developed to explain the “few remaining puzzles” of classical.
SPECIAL RELATIVITY -Postulates of Special Relativity -Relativity of time –> time dilation -Relativity of length –> length contraction © 2005.
PHY 1371Dr. Jie Zou1 Chapter 39 Relativity. PHY 1371Dr. Jie Zou2 Outline The principle of Galilean relativity Galilean space-time transformation equations.
Principle of special relativity Their is inconsistency between EM and Newtonian mechanics, as discussed earlier Einstein proposed SR to restore the inconsistency.
Special Relativity & General Relativity
Chapter 37 Special Relativity. 37.2: The postulates: The Michelson-Morley experiment Validity of Maxwell’s equations.
Time Dilation, Length Contraction and Doppler
1 PH300 Modern Physics SP11 1/27 Day 5: Questions? Time Dilation Length Contraction Next Week: Spacetime Relativistic Momentum & Energy “I sometimes ask.
Further Logistical Consequences of Einstein’s Postulates
Special Relativity The Death of Newtonian Physics.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Outline Chapter 29 Physics, 4 th Edition James S. Walker.
Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Introduction to special relativity
Special Relativity Chapters 15 and 16.
Special Theory of Relativity
Special relativity.
Phy107 Fall From last time… Galilean Relativity –Laws of mechanics identical in all inertial ref. frames Einstein’s Relativity –All laws of physics.
Special Relativity Space and Time. Spacetime Motion in space is related to motion in time. Special theory of relativity: describes how time is affected.
The Special Theory of Relativity. Galilean-Newtonian Relativity Definition of an inertial reference frame: One in which Newton’s first law is valid Earth.
Chapter 26 Relativity © 2006, B.J. Lieb
Special Relativity Einstein (1905): Three Nobel-Prize worthy publications On unrelated subjects: Brownian motion Photo-electric effect (Nobel prize) “On.
Special Relativity Contents: The End of Physics Michelson Morley Postulates of Special Relativity Time Dilation.
 Newtonian relativity  Michelson-Morley Experiment  Einstein ’ s principle of relativity  Special relativity  Lorentz transformation  Relativistic.
Special Relativity: “all motion is relative”
Relatively Einstein 2005 has been chosen as the World Year of Physics to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Einstein’s Miraculous Year. In this presentation,
USC2001 Energy Lecture 4 Special Relativity Wayne M. Lawton Department of Mathematics National University of Singapore 2 Science Drive 2 Singapore
The Theory of Special Relativity Ch 26. Two Theories of Relativity Special Relativity (1905) –Inertial Reference frames only –Time dilation –Length Contraction.
Time Dilation We can illustrate the fact that observers in different inertial frames may measure different time intervals between a pair of events by considering.
Chapter 28 Special Relativity Events and Inertial Reference Frames An event is a physical “happening” that occurs at a certain place and time. To.
Chapter 28: Special Relativity
Relativity: QuarkNet Lecture. What we know circa 1900: Light travels at a finite velocity. Ole Rømer Galileo was among the first to try and measure.
Astronomy 1143 – Spring 2014 Lecture 18: Special Relativity.
Phy 107 Fall From Last Time Physics changed drastically in the early 1900’s Relativity one of the new discoveries –Changed the way we think about.
My Chapter 26 Lecture.
Unit 13 Relativity.
Consequences of Special Relativity Simultaneity: Newton’s mechanics ”a universal time scale exists that is the same for all observers” Einstein: “No universal.
Special Relativity Physics 102: Lecture 28 Make sure your grade book entries are correct.
Chapter 37 Relativity Relativity is an important subject that looks at the measurement of where and when events take place, and how these events are measured.
Special Relativity Physics 12 Adv. Einstein’s Postulates  In 1905, while working as a patent clerk in Switzerland, Einstein published his paper on.
Chapter 39 Relativity. A Brief Overview of Modern Physics 20 th Century revolution 1900 Max Planck Basic ideas leading to Quantum theory 1905 Einstein.
1 PHYS 3313 – Section 001 Lecture #5 Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2013 Dr. Jaehoon Yu Time Dilation & Length Contraction Relativistic Velocity Addition Twin Paradox.
Chapter 1 Relativity 1.
SPECIAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY. Inertial frame Fig1. Frame S’ moves in the +x direction with the speed v relative to frame S.
Visual Guide to Special and General Relativity. This is about to get weird…
RELATIVITY Einstein demonstrated that space and time are entangled. The time between two events depends on how far apart they occur, and vice versa. Also,
Special Relativity /- 5 The End of physics: Black Body Radiation -> Quantum mechanics Velocity of light With Respect to ether Maxwell’s Equations…
Special Relativity Lecture 25 F2013 Lorentz transformations 1.
By: Jennifer Doran. What was Known in 1900 Newton’s laws of motion Maxwell’s laws of electromagnetism.
RELATIVITY Einstein demonstrated that space and time are entangled.
8. The special theory of relativity
Einstein’s Relativity Part 2
Chapter 28: Special Relativity
RELATIVITY III SPECIAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY
Physics 1161: PreLecture 26 Special Relativity 1.
Chapter 37 Special Relativity
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 37 Relativity is an important subject that looks at the measurement of where and when events take place, and how these events are measured in reference frames that are moving relative to one another. In this Chapter we will explore with the special theory of relativity (which we will refer to simply as "relativity"), which only deals with inertial reference frames (where Newton's laws are valid). The general theory of relativity looks at the more challenging situation where reference frames undergo gravitational acceleration. In 1905, Albert Einstein stunned the scientific world by introducing two "simple" postulates with which he showed that the old, common-sense ideas about relativity are wrong. Although Einstein's ideas seem strange and counter-intuitive, e.g., rate at which time passes depends on the speed of reference frame, these ideas have not only been validated by experiment, they are being used in modern technology, e.g., global positioning satellites. Relativity 37-

Some references on relativity The original papers of Einstein N. David Mermin American Journal of Physics 65, 476-486 (1997) and 66, 1077-1080 (1998) http://people.ccmr.cornell.edu/~mermin/homepage/minkowski.pdf It's About Time: Understanding Einstein's Relativity N. David Mermin http://press.princeton.edu/titles/8112.html Others

About that speed conventional foot (ft) = 0.3048 m. 1 foot (f) = 0.299792458 m. 1 f/ns = 299,792,458 m/s = c, speed of light. (ns = nanosecond = 10-9 sec)

The Postulates 1. The Relativity Postulate: The laws of physics are the same for observers in all inertial reference frames. No frame is preferred over any other. 2. The Speed of Light Postulate: The speed of light in vacuum has the same value c in all directions and in all inertial reference frames. Both postulates tested exhaustively, no exceptions found! 37-

The Ultimate Speed Experiment by Bertozzi in 1964 accelerated electrons and measured their speed and kinetic energy independently. Kinetic energy →∞ as speed → c Fig. 37-2 Ultimate Speed→Speed of Light: 37-

Testing the Speed of Light Postulate If speed of light is same for all inertial reference frames, then speed of light emitted by a source (pion, p0) moving relative to a given frame (for example, a laboratory) should be the same as the speed light that is emitted by a source that is at rest in the laboratory). 1964 experiment at CERN (European particle physics lab): Pions moving at 0.9975c with respect to the laboratory decay, emitting two photons (g). The speed of the light waves (g-rays) emitted by the pions was measured always to be c in the lab frame (not up to 2c!)→same as if pions were at rest in the lab frame! 37-

Measuring an Event Event: something that happens, can be assigned three space coordinates and one time coordinate Where something happens is straightforward, when something happens is trickier (for example the sound of an explosion will reach a closer observer sooner than a farther observer. Space-Time Coordinates 1. Space Coordinates: three dimensional array of measuring rods 2. Time coordinate: Synchronized clocks at each measuring rod intersection How do we synchronize the clocks? Fig. 37-3 All clocks read exactly the same time if you were able to look at them all at once! Event A: x=3.6 rod lenghts, y=1.3 rod lengths, z=0, time=reading on nearest clock 37-

The Relativity of Simultaneity Sam observes two independent events (event Red and event Blue) occurring at the same time, Sally, who is running at a constant speed with respect to Sam also observes these two events. Does Sally also find that the events occurred at the same time? If two observers are in relative motion, they will not, in general, agree as whether the two events are simultaneous. If one observer finds them to be simultaneous, the other generally will not. Simultaneity is not an absolute concept but a rather relative one, depending on the motion of the observer. WARNING: When we speak of observers like Sam and Sally, we are referring to the entire space-time coordinate system (frame of reference) in which each is at rest. The observer's location within their frame of reference does not affect the relativistic physics that we discuss here. 37-

A Closer Look at Simultaneity Fig. 37-4 Events Blue and Red same distance from Sam and Sally, Sam at rest→the light from two events reaches him at same time →he concludes that the two events occurred at the same time (in his frame). Sally is moving to right→sees the light from Red event before the light from Blue event. Distance from Sally to B' and R' same and light travels at c from both events towards Sally →Event Red must have occurred at an earlier time (in her frame)! What would a third stationary observer, Bill, standing to the right of Sam observe? 37-

The Relativity of Time The time interval between two events depends on how far apart they occur in both space and time; that is, their spatial and temporal separations are entangled. Fig. 37-5 37-

The Relativity of Time, cont'd When two events occur at the same location in an inertial reference frame, the time interval between them, measured in that frame, is called the proper time interval or the proper time. Measurements of the same time interval from any other inertial reference frame are always greater. In previous example, who measures the proper time? Speed Parameter: Lorentz factor: 37-

The Relativity of Time, cont'd Lorentz factor g as a function of the speed parameter b Fig. 37-6 37-

Two Tests of Time Dilation 1. Microscopic Clocks. Subatomic particles called muons are unstable and decay (transform into other particles). The average time from when a muon is produced to when it decays (Dt) depends on how fast the muon is moving. Muon stationary in lab (production and decay in same place, at muon itself) Dt0=2.200 ms If muon is moving at speed 0.9994c with respect to the lab (production and decay in different places in the lab frame) the lifetime measured by laboratory clocks will be dilated 37-

Two Tests of Time Dilation, cont'd 1. Macroscopic Clocks. Super precision atomic clocks (large systems) flown in airplanes b~7x10-7 (Hafele and Keating in 1977 within 10%, and U. Maryland a few years later within 1% of predictions) repeated the muon lifetime experiment on a macroscopic scale If the clock on the U. Maryland flight registered 15.00000000000000 hours as the flight duration, how much would a clock that stayed on earth (lab frame) have measured for the duration? More or less? Does it matter whether airplane returns to same place? 37-

The Relativity of Length The length L0 of an object in the rest frame of the object is its proper length or rest length. Measurement of the length from any other reference frame that is in motion parallel to the length are always less than the proper length. 37-

Does a moving object really shrink? Fig. 37-7 Must measure front and back of moving penguin simultaneously to get its length in your frame. Let's do this by having two lights flash simultaneously in the rest frame when the front and back of the penguin align with them. In penguin's frame, your measurements did not occur simultaneously. You first measured the front end (light from front flash reaches moving observer first as in slide 37-7) and then the back (after the back has moved forward), so the length that you measure will appear to be shorter than in the penguin's rest frame. 37-

Proof of Eq. 37-13 Sam is sitting on bench at train station. Using a tape measure, Sam determines the length of the station in his frame, which is the proper length L0. Sally is sitting on a train that passes through the station. What is the length L of the train station that Sally measures? v According to Sam, Sally moves through the station (time interval between passing point A and then point B, different places in Sam's frame) in time Dt=L0/v : Sally Train A B Sam length of train station For Sally, the platform moves past her. She passes points A and B at the same place in her reference frame (proper time) in time Dt0: 37-

The Lorentz Transformation How are coordinates x, y, z, and t reporting an event in frame S related to the coordinates x', y', z', and t' reporting the same event in moving frame S'? Fig. 37-9 Gallilean Transformation Equations Origins coincide at t = t' =0 Lorentz Transformation Equations 37-

The Lorentz Transformation, cont'd What about S coordinates in terms of S' coordinates? Switch from one frame to the other by letting v→ -v What about position and time intervals for pairs of events? 37-

Some Consequences of the Lorentz Equations Simultaneity Time Dilation Length Contraction 37-

The Relativity of Velocities Fig. 37-11 37-

Doppler Effect for Light Let f0 represent the proper frequency (frequency in the source's rest frame) If source and detector moving towards one another b → - b Note: Unlike Doppler shift with sound, only relative motion matters since there is no ether/air to be moving with respect to. Low Speed Doppler Effect For b<<1 Same as for sound waves 37-

Doppler Effect for Light, cont'd Astronomical Doppler Effect Proper wavelength l0 associated with rest frame frequency f0. Replacing b=v/c and using l-l0 = |Dl| = Doppler shift 37-

Doppler Effect for Light , cont'd Transverse Doppler Effect Fig. 37-12 Classical theory predicts no Doppler shift observed at point D when source S is at point P. For low speeds (b<<1) Transverse Doppler effect another test of time dilation (T=1/f) Proper period T0=1/f0) 37-

Doppler Effect for Light , cont'd The NAVSTAR Navigation System v1 f03 f01 v3 vairplane v2 f02 Given v1, v2, v3, f01, f02, f03, and measured f1, f2, f3, can determine vairplane, 37-

A New Look at Momentum relativistic expression using Dt=Dt0 g, where the time Dt0 to move a distance Dx is measured in the moving observer's frame 37-

A New Look at Energy Mass energy or rest energy Object Mass (kg) Energy Equivalent Electron ≈ 9.11x10-31 ≈ 8.19x10-14J (≈ 511 keV) Proton ≈ 1.67x10-27 ≈ 1.50x10-10J (≈ 938 MeV) Uranium atom ≈ 3.95x10-25 ≈ 3.55x10-8J (≈ 225 GeV) Dust particle ≈ 1x10-13 ≈ 1x104J (≈ 2 kcal.) U.S. penny ≈ 3.1x10-3 ≈ 2.8x1014J (≈ 78 GWh) Table 37-3 The Energy Equivalents of a Few Objects 37-

A New Look at Energy , cont'd Total energy The total energy E of an isolated system cannot change 37-

A New Look at Energy, cont'd Kinetic energy Fig. 37-14 37-

A New Look at Energy, cont'd Momentum and kinetic energy Fig. 37-15 37-