For a generally
accessible and less technical introduction to the topic, see Introduction
to special relativity.
Special relativity (SR) (aka the special theory of relativity) is the
physical theory of measurement in inertial frames of reference proposed in
1905 by Albert Einstein in his article "On the Electrodynamics of Moving
Bodies". It generalises Galileo's principle of relativity — that all
uniform motion was relative, and that there is no absolute and well-defined
state of rest (no privileged reference frames) — from mechanics to all the
laws of physics, including electrodynamics.
To stress this point, Einstein not only widened the postulate of
relativity, but added the second postulate that all observers will always
measure the speed of light to be the same no matter what their state of
uniform linear motion.[1]
This theory has a variety of surprising consequences that seem to violate
common sense, but all have been experimentally verified. Special
relativity overthrows Newtonian notions of absolute space and time by
stating that time and space are perceived differently in the sense that
measurements of length and time intervals depend on the motion of the
observer. It yields the equivalence of matter and energy, as expressed in
the mass-energy equivalence formula E = mc2, where c is the speed of light
in a vacuum. Special relativity agrees with Newtonian mechanics in their
common realm of applicability, in experiments in which all velocities are
small compared to the speed of light.
The theory was called "special" because it applies the principle of
relativity only to inertial frames. Einstein developed general relativity
to apply the principle generally, that is, to any frame, and that theory
includes the effects of gravity. Special relativity does not account for
gravity, but it can deal with accelerations.
Although special relativity makes some quantities relative, such as time,
that we would have imagined to be absolute based on everyday experience,
it also makes absolute some others that were thought to be relative. In
particular, it states that the speed of light is the same for all
observers, even if they are in motion relative to one another. Special
relativity reveals that c is not just the velocity of a certain phenomenon
- light - but rather a fundamental feature of the way space and time are
tied together. In particular, special relativity states that it is
impossible for any material object to accelerate to light speed.
Postulates
-
Main article: Postulates of special relativity
- First postulate - Special principle of relativity - The laws of
physics are the same in all inertial frames of reference. In other words,
there are no privileged inertial frames of reference.
Second postulate - Invariance of c - The speed of light in a vacuum is a
universal constant, c, which is independent of the motion of the light
source.
The power of Einstein's argument stems from the manner in which he
derived startling and seemingly implausible results from two simple
assumptions that were founded on analysis of observations. An observer
attempting to measure the speed of light's propagation will get exactly
the same answer no matter how the observer or the system's components are
moving.
Lack of an absolute reference frame
The principle of relativity, which states that there is no stationary
reference frame, dates back to Galileo, and was incorporated into
Newtonian Physics. However, in the late 19th century, the existence of
electromagnetic waves led physicists to suggest that the universe was
filled with a substance known as "aether", which would act as the medium
through which these waves, or vibrations traveled. The aether was thought
to constitute an absolute reference frame against which speeds could be
measured. In other words, the aether was the only fixed or motionless
thing in the universe. Aether supposedly had some wonderful properties: it
was sufficiently elastic that it could support electromagnetic waves, and
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, indicated that the Earth was always 'stationary'
relative to the aether — something that was difficult to explain, since
the Earth is in orbit around the Sun. Einstein's elegant solution was to
discard the notion of an aether and an absolute state of rest. Special
relativity is formulated so as to not assume that any particular frame of
reference is special; rather, in relativity, any reference frame moving
with uniform motion will observe the same laws of physics. In particular,
the speed of light in a vacuum is always measured to be c, even
when measured by multiple systems that are moving at different (but
constant) velocities.
Consequences
- Main article: Consequences of special relativity
Einstein has said that all of the consequences of special relativity
can be derived from examination of the Lorentz transformations.
These transformations, and hence special relativity, lead to different
physical predictions than Newtonian mechanics 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:
- Time dilation — the time lapse between
two events is not invariant from one observer to another, but is
dependent on the relative speeds of the observers' reference frames
(e.g., the twin paradox which concerns a twin who flies off in a
spaceship traveling near the speed of light and returns to discover that
his twin has aged much more).
- Relativity of simultaneity — two
events happening in two different locations that occur simultaneously to
one observer, may occur at different times to another observer (lack of
absolute simultaneity).
Lorentz contraction — the dimensions (e.g., length) of an object as
measured by one observer may be smaller than the results of measurements
of the same object made by another observer (e.g., the ladder paradox
involvesa long ladder traveling near the speed of light and being
contained within a smaller garage).
- Composition of velocities —
velocities (and speeds) do not simply 'add', for example if a rocket is
moving at ⅔ the speed of light relative to an observer, and the rocket
fires a missile at ⅔ of the speed of light relative to the rocket, the
missile does not exceed the speed of light relative to the observer. (In
this example, the observer would see the missile travel with a speed of
12/13 the speed of light.)
Inertia and momentum — as an object's velocity approaches the speed of
light from an observer's point of view, its mass appears to increase
thereby making it more and more difficult to accelerate it from within
the observer's frame of reference.
- Equivalence of mass and energy, E = mc2 — The energy content of
an object at rest with mass m equals mc2. Conservation of energy implies
that in any reaction a decrease of the sum of the masses of
particles must be accompanied by an increase in kinetic energies of the
particles after the reaction. Similarly, the mass of an object can be
increased by taking in kinetic energies.
Reference frames, coordinates and the
Lorentz transformation
- Full article: Lorentz transformations
Diagram 1. Changing views of spacetime along the world line of a
rapidly accelerating observer.
In this animation, the vertical direction indicates time and the
horizontal direction indicates distance, the dashed line is the
spacetime trajectory ("world line") of the observer. The lower
quarter of the diagram shows the events that are visible to the
observer, and the upper quarter shows the
light cone- those that will be able to see the observer. The
small dots are arbitrary events in spacetime.
The slope of the world line (deviation from being vertical) gives
the relative velocity to the observer. Note how the view of
spacetime changes when the observer accelerates.
Relativity theory depends on "reference frames".A reference frame
is an observational perspective in space at rest, or in uniform motion,
from which a position can be measured along 3 spatial axes. In addition, a
reference frame has the ability to determine measurements of the time of
events using a 'clock' (any reference device with uniform periodicity).
An event is an occurrence that can be assigned a single unique time and
location in space relative to a reference frame: it is a "point" in space-time.
Since the speed of light is constant in relativity in each and every
reference frame, pulses of light can be used to unambiguously measure
distances and refer back the times that events occurred to the clock, even
though light takes time to reach the clock after the event has transpired.
For example, the explosion of a firecracker may be considered to be an
"event". We can completely specify an event by its four space-time
coordinates: The time of occurrence and its 3-dimensional spatial location
define a reference point. Let's call this reference frame S.
In relativity theory we often want to calculate the position of a point
from a different reference point.
Suppose we have a second reference frame S', whose spatial axes and
clock exactly coincide with that of S at time zero, but it is moving at a
constant velocity with respect to S along the
-axis.
Since there is no absolute reference frame in relativity theory, a
concept of 'moving' doesn't strictly exist, as everything is always moving
with respect to some other reference frame. Instead, any two frames that
move at the same speed in the same direction are said to be comoving.
Therefore S and S' are not comoving.
Let's define the event to have space-time coordinates
in system S and
in S'. Then the Lorentz transformation specifies that these coordinates
are related in the following way:
where is called the Lorentz factor and is
the speed of light in a vacuum.
The and
coordinates are unaffected, but the
and
axes are mixed up by the
transformation. In a way this transformation can be understood as a
hyperbolic rotation.
A quantity invariant under Lorentz transformations is known as a Lorentz
scalar.
Simultaneity
From the first equation of the Lorentz transformation in terms of
coordinate differences
it is clear that two events that are simultaneous in frame S (satisfying
), are not necessarily simultaneous in another inertial frame S' (satisfying
). Only if these events are colocal in frame S (satisfying ), will they be
simultaneous in another frame S'.
Time dilation and length contraction
Writing the Lorentz Transformation and its inverse in terms of
coordinate differences we get
-
and
-
Suppose we have a clock at rest in the unprimed system S. Two
consecutive ticks of this clock are then characterized by
Δx = 0. If we want to know the
relation between the times between these ticks as measured in both systems,
we can use the first equation and find:
- for events satisfying
This shows that the time Δt'
between the two ticks as seen in the 'moving' frame S' is larger than the
time Δt between these ticks as
measured in the rest frame of the clock. This phenomenon is called time
dilation.
Similarly, suppose we have a measuring rod at rest in the unprimed
system. In this system, the length of this rod is written as
Δx. If we want to find the length of
this rod as measured in the 'moving' system S', we must make sure to
measure the distances x' to the end
points of the rod simultaneously in the primed frame S'. In other words,
the measurement is characterized by Δt' =
0, which we can combine with the fourth equation to find the
relation between the lengths Δx and
Δx':
-
- for events satisfying
This shows that the length Δx' of
the rod as measured in the 'moving' frame S' is shorter than the length
Δx in its own rest frame. This
phenomenon is called length contraction or Lorentz contraction.
These effects are not merely appearances; they are explicitly related
to our way of measuring time intervals between events which occur
at the same place in a given coordinate system (called "co-local" events).
These time intervals will be different in another coordinate system
moving with respect to the first, unless the events are also simultaneous.
Similarly, these effects also relate to our measured distances between
separated but simultaneous events in a given coordinate system of choice.
If these events are not co-local, but are separated by distance (space),
they will not occur at the same spacial distance from each
other when seen from another moving coordinate system.
Causality and prohibition of motion
faster than light
In diagram 2 the interval AB 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. If it was possible for a
cause-and-effect relationship to exist between events A and C, then
paradoxes of causality would result. For example, if A was the cause, and
C the effect, then there would be frames of reference in which the effect
preceded the cause. Although this in itself won't give rise to a paradox,
one can show [2] [3] that faster than light signals can be sent back into
one's own past. A causal paradox can then be constructed by sending the
signal if and only if no signal was received previously.
Therefore, one of the consequences of special relativity is that (assuming
causality is to be preserved), no information or material object can
travel faster than light. On the other hand, the logical situation is not
as clear in the case of general relativity, so it is an open question
whether or not there is some fundamental principle that preserves
causality (and therefore prevents motion faster than light) in general
relativity.
Even without considerations of causality, there are other strong reasons
why faster-than-light travel is forbidden by special relativity. For
example, if a constant force is applied to an object for a limitless
amount of time, then integrating F=dp/dt gives a momentum that grows
without bound, but this is simply because p = mγv approaches infinity as v
approaches c. To an observer who is not accelerating, it appears as though
the object's inertia is increasing, so as to produce a smaller
acceleration in response to the same force. This behavior is in fact
observed in particle accelerators.
Composition of velocities
If the observer in
sees an object moving along the
axis at velocity
,
then the observer in the
system, a frame of reference moving at velocity
in the direction with respect to
, will see the object moving with
velocity
where
This equation can be derived from the space and time transformations
above. Notice that if the object were moving at the speed of light in the
system (i.e. ), then it would also be moving at the speed of light in the
system. Also, if both
and
are small with respect to the speed of light, we
will recover the intuitive Galilean transformation of velocities:
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 traveling at velocity v the energy and
momentum are given (and even defined) by
-
-
where γ (the Lorentz factor) is given by
where is the ratio of the velocity and the speed of light. The term γ
occurs frequently in relativity, and comes from the Lorentz transformation
equations.
Relativistic energy and momentum can be related through the formula
which is referred to as the relativistic energy-momentum equation.
It is interesting to observe that while the energy and the momentum are
observer dependent (vary from frame to frame) the quantity
is observer
independent.
For velocities much smaller than those of light, γ can be approximated
using a Taylor series expansion and one finds that
Barring the first term in the energy expression (discussed below),
these formulas agree exactly with the standard definitions of
Newtonian kinetic energy and momentum. This is as it should be, for special
relativity must agree with Newtonian mechanics at low velocities.
Looking at the above formulas for energy, one sees that when an object
is at rest (v = 0 and γ = 1) there is a non-zero energy
remaining:
This energy is referred to as rest energy. The rest energy does
not cause any conflict with the Newtonian theory because it is a constant
and, as far as kinetic energy is concerned, it is only differences in
energy which are meaningful.
Taking this formula at face value, we see that in relativity, mass
is simply another form of energy. In 1927 Einstein remarked about
special relativity:
Under this theory mass is not an unalterable magnitude, but a
magnitude dependent on (and, indeed, identical with) the amount of energy.[4]
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 that can be released by
nuclear reactions, providing important information which was useful in the
development of nuclear energy and, consequently, the nuclear bomb. The
implications of this formula on 20th-century life
have made it one of the most famous equations in all of science.
Relativistic mass
Introductory physics courses and some older textbooks on special
relativity sometimes define a relativistic mass which increases as the
velocity of a body increases. According to the geometric interpretation of
special relativity, this is often deprecated and the term 'mass' is
reserved to mean invariant mass and is thus independent of the inertial frame, i.e.,
invariant.
Using the relativistic mass definition, the mass of an object may vary
depending on the observer's inertial frame in the same way that other
properties such as its length may do so. 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 a body with an
invariant mass m moving at some velocity relative to an observer's
reference system. That observer defines the relativistic mass of
that body as:
"Relativistic mass" should not be confused with the "longitudinal" and
"transverse mass" definitions that were used around 1900 and that were
based on an inconsistent application of the laws of Newton: those used
f=ma for a variable mass, while relativistic mass corresponds to
Newton's dynamic mass in which p=Mv and f=dp/dt.
Note also that the body does not actually become more massive in
its proper frame, since the relativistic mass is only different for
an observer in a different frame. The only mass that is frame
independent is the invariant mass. When using the relativistic mass, the
applicable reference frame should be specified if it isn't already obvious
or implied. It also goes almost without saying that the increase in
relativistic mass does not come from an increased number of atoms in the
object. Instead, the relativistic mass of each atom and subatomic particle
has increased.
Physics textbooks sometimes use the relativistic mass as it allows the
students to utilize their knowledge of Newtonian physics to gain some
intuitive grasp of relativity in their frame of choice (usually their own!).
"Relativistic mass" is also consistent with the concepts "time dilation"
and "length contraction".
Force
The classical definition of ordinary force f is given by Newton's
Second Law in its original form:
and this is valid in relativity.
Many modern textbooks rewrite Newton's Second Law as
This form is not valid in relativity or in other situations where the
relativistic mass M is varying.
This formula can be replaced in the relativistic case by
As seen from the equation, ordinary force and acceleration vectors are
not necessarily parallel in relativity.
However the four-vector expression relating four-force
to invariant mass m and four-accelerationrestores the same equation form
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:
where (dx1,dx2,dx3)
are the differentials of the three spatial dimensions. In the geometry of
special relativity, a fourth dimension is added, derived from time, so
that the equation for the differential of distance becomes:
If we wished to make the time coordinate look like the space
coordinates, we could treat time as imaginary: x4 = ict . In this case the above
equation becomes symmetric:
This suggests what is in fact a profound theoretical insight as it
shows that special relativity is simply a rotational symmetry of our
space-time, very similar to rotational symmetry of Euclidean space. Just
as Euclidean space uses a Euclidean metric, so space-time uses a Minkowski
metric. Basically, SR can be stated in terms of the invariance of space-time
interval (between any two events) as seen from any inertial reference
frame. All equations and effects of special relativity can be derived from
this rotational symmetry (the Poincaré group) of Minkowski space-time. According to Misner (1971
§2.3), ultimately the deeper understanding of both special and general
relativity will come from the study of the Minkowski metric (described
below) rather than a "disguised" Euclidean metric using ict as the
time coordinate.
If we reduce the spatial dimensions to 2, so that we can represent the
physics in a 3-D space
We see that the null geodesics lie along a dual-cone:
defined by the equation
or
Which is the equation of a circle with r=c×dt. If we extend this
to three spatial dimensions, the null geodesics are the 4-dimensional cone:
-
-
-
-
This null dual-cone represents the "line of sight" of a point in space.
That is, when we look at the stars and say
"The light from that star which I am receiving is X years old", we are
looking down this line of sight: a null geodesic. We are looking at an
event meters away and d/c seconds in the past. For this reason the
null dual cone is also known as the 'light cone'. (The point in the lower
left of the picture below represents the star, the origin represents the
observer, and the line represents the null geodesic "line of sight".)
The cone in the -t region is the information that the point is 'receiving',
while the cone in the +t section is the information that the point
is 'sending'.
The geometry of Minkowski space can be depicted using Minkowski
diagrams, which are also useful in understanding many of the
thought-experiments in special relativity.
Physics in spacetime
Here, we see how to write the equations of special relativity in a
manifestly Lorentz covariant form. The position of an event in spacetime
is given by a contravariant four vector whose components are:
That is, x0 = t
and x1 = x and
x2 = y and
x3 = z. Superscripts
are contravariant indices in this section rather than exponents except
when they indicate a square. Subscripts are covariant indices which also range from zero to three as with the
spacetime gradient of a field φ:
Metric and transformations of
coordinates
Having recognised the four-dimensional nature of spacetime, we are
driven to employ the Minkowski metric, η, given in components (valid in
any inertial reference frame) as:
Its reciprocal is:
Then we recognize that co-ordinate transformations between inertial
reference frames are given by the Lorentz transformation tensor Λ.
For the special case of motion along the x-axis, we have:
which is simply the matrix of a boost (like a rotation) between the
x and t coordinates. Where μ' indicates the row and ν indicates
the column. Also, β and γ are defined as:
More generally, a transformation from one inertial frame (ignoring
translations for simplicity) to another must satisfy:
where there is an implied summation
of and
from 0 to 3 on the right-hand
side in accordance with the Einstein summation convention. The
Poincaré group is the most general group of transformations which
preserves the Minkowski metric and this is the physical symmetry underlying special
relativity.
All proper physical quantities are given by tensors. So to transform
from one frame to another, we use the well known tensor transformation law
Where is the reciprocal matrix of .
To see how this is useful, we transform the position of an event from
an unprimed co-ordinate system S to a primed system S', we
calculate
which is the Lorentz transformation given above. All tensors transform
by the same rule.
The squared length of the differential of the position four-vector
constructed using
is an invariant. Being invariant means that it takes the same value in
all inertial frames, because it is a scalar (0 rank tensor), and so no Λ
appears in its trivial transformation. Notice that when the line element
is negative that
is the differential
of proper time, while when is positive, is differential of
the proper distance.
The primary value of expressing the equations of physics in a tensor
form is that they are then manifestly invariant under the Poincaré group,
so that we do not have to do a special and tedious calculation to check
that fact. Also in constructing such equations we often find that
equations previously thought to be unrelated are, in fact, closely
connected being part of the same tensor equation.
Velocity and acceleration in 4D
Recognising other physical quantities as tensors also simplifies their
transformation laws. First note that the velocity four-vector Uμ is given by
Recognising this, we can turn the awkward looking law about composition
of velocities into a simple statement about transforming the velocity four-vector
of one particle from one frame to another. Uμ also has
an invariant form:
So all velocity four-vectors have a magnitude of c. This is an
expression of the fact that there is no such thing as being at coordinate
rest in relativity: at the least, you are always moving forward through
time. The acceleration 4-vector is given by . Given this, differentiating the
above equation by τ produces
So in relativity, the acceleration four-vector and the velocity four-vector
are orthogonal.
Momentum in 4D
The momentum and energy combine into a covariant 4-vector:
where m is the invariant mass.
The invariant magnitude of the momentum 4-vector is:
We can work out what this invariant is by first arguing that, since it
is a scalar, it doesn't matter which reference frame we calculate it, and
then by transforming to a frame where the total momentum is zero.
We see that the rest energy is an independent invariant. A rest energy
can be calculated even for particles and systems in motion, by translating
to a frame in which momentum is zero.
The rest energy is related to the mass according to the celebrated
equation discussed above:
Note that the mass of systems measured in their center of momentum
frame (where total momentum is zero) is given by the total energy of the
system in this frame. It may not be equal to the sum of individual system
masses measured in other frames.
Force in 4D
To use Newton's third law of motion, both forces must be defined as the
rate of change of momentum with respect to the same time coordinate. That
is, it requires the 3D force defined above. Unfortunately, there is no
tensor in 4D which contains the components of the 3D force vector among
its components.
If a particle is not traveling at c, one can transform the 3D force from
the particle's co-moving reference frame into the observer's reference
frame.
This yields a 4-vector called the four-force. It is the rate of change
of the above energy momentum four-vector with respect to proper time. The
covariant version of the four-force is:
where is the proper time.
In the rest frame of the object, the time component of the four force
is zero unless the "invariant mass" of the object is changing in which case it is the negative of
that rate of change times c2. In general, though, the
components of the four force are not equal to the components of the three-force,
because the three force is defined by the rate of change of momentum with
respect to coordinate time, i.e.
while the four force is defined by the
rate of change of momentum with respect to proper time, i.e.
.
In a continuous medium, the 3D density of force combines with
the density of power to form a covariant 4-vector. The spatial part
is the result of dividing the force on a small cell (in 3-space) by the
volume of that cell. The time component is the negative of the power
transferred to that cell divided by the volume of the cell. This will be
used below in the section on electromagnetism.
Relativity and unifying
electromagnetism
Theoretical investigation in classical electromagnetism led to
the discovery of wave propagation. Equations generalizing the
electromagnetic effects found that finite propagation-speed of the E and B
fields required certain behaviors on charged particles. The general study
of moving charges forms the Liénard–Wiechert potential, which is a step
towards special relativity.
The Lorentz transformation of the electric field of a moving
charge into a non-moving observer's reference frame results in the
appearance of a mathematical term commonly called the magnetic field.
Conversely, the magnetic field generated by a moving charge disappears and
becomes a purely electrostatic field in a comoving frame of reference.
Maxwell's equations are thus simply an empirical fit to special
relativistic effects in a classical model of the Universe. As electric and
magnetic fields are reference frame dependent and thus intertwined, one
speaks of electromagnetic fields. Special relativity provides the
transformation rules for how an electromagnetic field in one inertial
frame appears in another inertial frame.
Electromagnetism in 4D
- Formulation of Maxwell's equations in special relativity
Maxwell's equations in the 3D form are already consistent with the
physical content of special relativity. But we must rewrite them to make
them manifestly invariant.[5]
The charge density
and
current density
are unified into the
current-charge 4-vector:
The law of charge conservation becomes:
The electric field
and the
magnetic induction
are now unified into the (rank 2 antisymmetric
covariant) electromagnetic field tensor:
The density of the Lorentz force exerted on matter by the electromagnetic field becomes:
Faraday's law of induction and Gauss's law for magnetism combine to form:
Although there appear to be 64 equations here, it actually reduces to
just four independent equations. Using the antisymmetry of the
electromagnetic field one can either reduce to an identity (0=0) or render
redundant all the equations except for those with λ,μ,ν = either 1,2,3 or
2,3,0 or 3,0,1 or 0,1,2.
The electric displacement
and the
magnetic field
are now unified into the (rank 2 antisymmetric
contravariant) electromagnetic displacement tensor:
Ampère's law and Gauss's law combine to form:
In a vacuum, the constitutive equations are:
Antisymmetry reduces these 16 equations to just six independent
equations.
The energy density of the electromagnetic field combines with Poynting
vector and the Maxwell stress tensor to form the 4D electromagnetic stress-energy
tensor. It is the flux (density) of the momentum 4-vector and as a rank 2
mixed tensor it is:
where
is the
Kronecker delta. When upper index is lowered with η, it becomes
symmetric and is part of the source of the gravitational field.
The conservation of linear momentum and energy by the electromagnetic
field is expressed by:
where is again the density of the Lorentz force. This equation can be deduced from the equations above (with
considerable effort).
Status
-
Status of special relativity
Special relativity is accurate only when gravitational potential is
much less than c2; in a strong gravitational field one must use general
relativity (which becomes special relativity at the limit of weak field).
At very small scales, such as at the Planck length and below quantum
effects must be taken into consideration resulting in quantum gravity.
However, at macroscopic scales and in the absence of strong gravitational
fields, special relativity is experimentally tested to extremely high
degree of accuracy (10-20) [6] and thus accepted by the physics community.
Experimental results which appear to contradict it are not reproducible
and are thus widely believed to be due to experimental errors.
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 it is an
organic part of all modern physical theories, most notably quantum field
theory, string theory, and general relativity (in the limiting case of
negligible gravitational fields).
Newtonian mechanics mathematically follows from special relativity at
small velocities (compared to the speed of light) - thus Newtonian
mechanics can be considered as a special relativity of slow moving bodies.
See Status of special relativity for a more detailed discussion.
A few key experiments can be mentioned that led to special relativity:
- The Trouton–Noble experiment showed that the torque on a capacitor is
independent on position and inertial reference frame — such experiments
led to the first postulate
- The famous Michelson-Morley experiment gave further support to the postulate
that detecting an absolute reference velocity was not achievable. It
should be stated here that, contrary to many alternative claims, it said
little about the invariance of the speed of light with respect to the
source and observer's velocity, as both source and observer were
travelling together at the same velocity at all times.
A number of experiments have been conducted to test special relativity
against rival theories. These include:
-
Kaufmann's experiment — electron deflection in exact accordance with
Lorentz-Einstein prediction
-
Hamar experiment — no "ether flow obstruction"
-
Kennedy–Thorndike experiment — time dilation in accordance with
Lorentz transformations
-
Rossi-Hall experiment — relativistic 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.
In addition, particle accelerators run almost every day somewhere in
the world, and routinely accelerate and measure the properties of
particles moving at near lightspeed. Many effects seen in particle
accelerators are highly consistent with relativity theory and are deeply
inconsistent with the earlier Newtonian mechanics.
References
^ Edwin F. Taylor and John Archibald Wheeler (1992). Spacetime Physics:
Introduction to Special Relativity. W. H. Freeman. ISBN 0-7167-2327-1.
^ R. C. Tolman, The theory of the Relativity of Motion, (Berkeley 1917),
p. 54
^ G. A. Benford, D. L. Book, and W. A. Newcomb, The Tachyonic
Antitelephone, Phys. Rev. D 2, 263 - 265 (1970) article
^ Einstein on Newton 1927
^ E. J. Post (1962). Formal Structure of Electromagnetics: General
Covariance and Electromagnetics. Dover Publications Inc.. ISBN
0-486-65427-3.
^ The number of works is vast, see as example:
Sidney Coleman, Sheldon L. Glashow, Cosmic Ray and Neutrino Tests of
Special Relativity, Phys. Lett. B405 (1997) 249-252, online
An overview can be found on this page of John Baez