1 / 46

Relativity

Relativity. H7: General relativity. Special relativity is concerned with inertial frames that are not accelerating But what happens when the inertial frame is accelerating This is the subject of General Relativity. What effect does mass have?.

Download Presentation

Relativity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Relativity H7: General relativity

  2. Special relativity is concerned with inertial frames that are not accelerating • But what happens when the inertial frame is accelerating • This is the subject of General Relativity

  3. What effect does mass have? • Gravity: tendency of massive bodies to attract each other • Inertia: resistance of a body against changes of its current state of motion

  4. Is gravity and inertia the same thing ? • No. They are completely different physical concepts. • There is no a priori reason, why they should be identical. In fact, for the electromagnetic force (Coulomb force), the source (the charge Q) and inertia (m) are indeed different. • But for gravity they appear to be identical  Equivalence Principle

  5. The equivalence principle • Einstein’s principle of equivalence states • No experiment can be performed that could distinguish between a uniform gravitational field and an equivalent uniform acceleration

  6. Eötvös experiment

  7. Result of the Eötvös experiment • Gravitational and inertial mass are identical to one part in a billion • modern experiments: identical to one part in a hundred billion

  8. What effect does mass have? • Source of gravity • Inertia

  9. Principle of Equivalence

  10. Implications of General Relativity • Gravitational mass and inertial mass are not just proportional, but completely equivalent • A clock in the presence of gravity runs more slowly than one where gravity is negligible • The frequencies of radiation emitted by atoms in a strong gravitational field are shifted to lower frequencies • This has been detected in the spectral lines emitted by atoms in massive stars

  11. More Implications of General Relativity • A gravitational field may be “transformed away” at any point if we choose an appropriate accelerated frame of reference – a freely falling frame • Einstein specified a certain quantity, the curvature of time-space, that describes the gravitational effect at every point

  12. Testing General Relativity • General Relativity predicts that a light ray passing near the Sun should be deflected by the curved space-time created by the Sun’s mass • The prediction was confirmed by astronomers during a total solar eclipse in 1919

  13. Bending light rays • If a rocket ship is undergoing constant acceleration and a flash light is shown on one side of the rocket ship towards the other side, the light will not hit the opposite side of the ship at the same height as the window.

  14. Bending light rays • The light will leave point A traveling at the speed of light in a purely horizontal direction. • When it reaches the other wall it will not reach the same height. According to Einstein’s principle of equivalence light will also bend in a gravitational field…

  15. Gravitational time dilation • Time slows down in a strong gravitational field • clocks undergoing acceleration will run slow compared to non-accelerating clocks • the greater the gravitational field, the greater the time dilation

  16. Gravitational time dilation • Clocks on the ground floor of a tall building will run slower than those in the upper floors; if you want to keep (relatively) young, find a job in the basement - or become a miner!

  17. Gravitational time dilation • Special relativity • General relativity • G = Gravitational constant, M is the mass and R is the radius

  18. Minkowski’s spacetime • As we have seen, time intervals, lengths, and simultaneity is relative and depend on the relative velocity of the observer. • velocity connects time and space • Let’s stop separating space and time, let’s rather talk about spacetime • spacetime is 4 dimensional, 3 spatial + 1 time dimensionbut is space and time really the same thing ?

  19. light: x=ct time ct space x Minkowski diagram

  20. world line of a particle ct x World lines — slowly moving

  21. world line of a particle ct x World lines — fast moving

  22. ct x Faster than speed of light ?

  23. (x1,y1) y1 s2= y2 + x2 y y (x2,y2) y2 x x1 x2 x geometrical interval

  24. (x1,t1) ct1 s2= (ct)2 – x2 ct ct (x2,t2) ct2 x x1 x2 x Spacetime interval

  25. Spacetime interval • – sign: difference between space and time • s2 is invariant under Lorentz transformation • for particle moving at speed of light:x = ct s2= 0 light like (null) distance

  26. Character of spacetime intervals • s2>0  ct > x • spatial distance can be traveled by speed of light • there exist an inertial frame, in which the two events happen at the same position • but they never happen simultaneously time like distance • s2<0  ct < x • spatial distance cannot be traveled by speed of light • there exist an inertial frame, in which the two events happen simultaneously • but they never happen at the same place space like distance

  27. Warping of spacetime • Gravitation can be explained by the curvature of spacetime. As an object travels in straight line in curved space its path will curve towards a massive object. No force is needed to explain the change of path, the curvature of spacetime is enough to explain the motion. Pretty clever.

  28. Warping of spacetime • These diagrams shows the change in path of a light wave close to a massive body

  29. Newtonian gravity • What velocity is required to leave the gravitational field of a planet or star? • Example: Earth • Radius: R = 6470 km = 6.47106 m • Mass: M = 5.97 1024 kg • escape velocity: vesc = 11.1 km/s

  30. Newtonian gravity • What velocity is required to leave the gravitational field of a planet or star?Example: Sun • Radius: R = 700 000 km = 7108 m • Mass: M = 21030 kg • escape velocity: vesc = 617 km/s

  31. Newtonian gravity • What velocity is required to leave the gravitational field of a planet or star? Example: a solar mass White Dwarf • Radius: R = 5000 km = 5106 m • Mass: M = 21030 kg • escape velocity: vesc = 7300 km/s

  32. Newtonian gravity • What velocity is required to leave the gravitational field of a planet or star?Example: a solar mass neutron star • Radius: R = 10 km = 104 m • Mass: M = 21030 kg • escape velocity: vesc = 163 000 km/s  ½ c

  33. Newtonian gravity • Can an object be so small that even light cannot escape ? • RS:“Schwarzschild Radius” • Example: for a solar mass • Mass: M = 21030 kg • Schwarzschild Radius: RS = 3 km

  34. Some definitions ... • The Schwarzschild radiusRSof an object of mass M is the radius, at which the escape speed is equal to the speed of light. • The event horizon is a sphere of radius RS. Nothing within the event horizon, not even light, can escape to the world outside the event horizon. • A Black Hole is an object whose radius is smaller than its event horizon.

  35. Sizes of objects

  36. space time Let’s do it within the context of general relativity — spacetime • spacetime distance (flat space): • Fourth coordinate: ct • time coordinate has different sign than spatial coordinates

  37. space time Let’s do it within the context of general relativity — spacetime • spacetime distance (curved space of a point mass):

  38. space time What happens if R RS • R> RS: everything o.k.: time: +, space:  but gravitational time dilation and length contraction • R RS:time  0 space   • R< RS: signs change!! time: , space: + “space passes”, everything falls to the center infinite density at the center, singularity

  39. Structure of a Black Hole

  40. What happens to an astronaut who falls into a black hole? • Far outside: nothing special • Falling in: long before the astronaut reaches the event horizon, he/she is torn apart by tidal forces • For an outside observer: • astronaut becomes more and more redshifted • The astronaut’s clock goes slower and slower • An outside observer never sees the astronaut crossing the event horizon.

  41. What happens, if an astronaut falls into a black hole? • For the astronaut: • He/she reaches and crosses the event horizon in a finite time. • Nothing special happens while crossing the event horizon (except some highly distorted pictures of the local environment) • After crossing the event horizon, the astronaut has 10 microseconds to enjoy the view before he/she reaches the singularity at the center.

  42. Doppler effect (for sound) • The pitch of an approaching car is higher than that of a car moving away.

  43. Doppler effect (for light) • The light of an approaching source is shifted to the blue, • the light of a receding source is shifted to the red.

  44. Doppler effect • The light of an approaching source is shifted to the blue, • the light of a receding source is shifted to the red. blue shift red shift

  45. Doppler effect redshift: • z=0: not moving • z=2: v=0.8c • z=: v=c

  46. Doppler effect • The formula for normal Doppler effect is • This is modified for general relativity

More Related