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2. Special Theory of Relativity 2.1 Classical Relativity An event seen by two observers. Position, velocity and acceleration ! = 2.2 Michelson-Morely Experiment !"! = 2 1 1 ! ! !"! = 2 1 1 ! ! Rotating the experiment phase changes at the eyepiece No motion of the fringes was observed. The ether does not exist. Therefore, there is no preferred inertial frame.

2. Special Theory of Relativity - Dr. Smith Home Pagephysicsx.pr.erau.edu/Courses/CoursesS2016/PS303/Letures Krane... · 2. Special Theory of Relativity 2.1 Classical Relativity An

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2. Special Theory of Relativity 2.1 Classical Relativity An event seen by two observers. Position, velocity and acceleration 𝑥! = 𝑥 − 𝑉𝑡 2.2 Michelson-Morely

Experiment

𝑡!"! =2𝐿𝑐

1

1 − 𝑢! 𝑐!

𝑡!"! =2𝐿𝑐

1

1 − 𝑢! 𝑐!

• Rotating the experiment →

phase changes at the eyepiece

• No motion of the fringes was observed.

• The ether does not exist. Therefore, there is no preferred inertial frame.

2. We need a new theory that reflects the constancy of the speed of light.

Special Theory of Relativity is based on two postulates:

1) The principle of relativity: The laws of physics are the same in all inertial reference frames.

2) The principle of the constancy of the speed of light: The

speed of light in free space has the same value c in all inertial reference frames.

The second postulate explains the failure of the Michelson-Morely experiment to observe a “phase change” (i.e., the motion of the fringes due to the directional change of the ether). The first postulate doesn’t allow for a preferred frame of reference (i.e., all inertial frames are equivalent). 3. The Lorentz Transformation Imagine having a stationary frame S, and a frame S’ moving along the 𝑥, 𝑥′ direction with velocity V w.r.t. S. A light pulse is emitted when the two origins cross and a spherical light pulse is observed in both inertial frames 𝑆, 𝑆′ . Let’s try to correlate the space-time events 𝑥, 𝑡 → 𝑥!, 𝑡′ 𝑥! − 𝑐𝑡! = 𝜆 𝑥 − 𝑐𝑡 Location of the pulse on the right side

𝑥! + 𝑐𝑡′ = 𝜇(𝑥 + 𝑐𝑡) Location of the pulse on the left side

such that 𝜆 and 𝜇 only depend on 𝑉, and c = constant.

Example: Compare the space-time coordinates between 𝑆 and 𝑆! along the 𝑥, 𝑥′ axes for the wave front moving in both the positive and negative directions. Compare the space-time coordinates after 10.0 ns has elapsed in the 𝑆 frame. Example: A meter stick is at rest in the 𝑆! frame as it is moving with 𝑉 = 4 5 𝑐 w.r.t. the 𝑆 frame. What's the length of the meter stick as observed in the 𝑆 frame. Example: A clock is at rest in the 𝑆! frame as it is moving with 𝑉 = 4 5 𝑐 w.r.t. the 𝑆 frame. How long does it take to "tick off" one second as observed with the clocks in our 𝑆 frame? Calculate the velocity equations: 𝑣!! , 𝑣!! , and 𝑣!!. Example: The 𝑆! frame is moving at 0.900 𝑐 and a flashlight is at rest in that frame shining a beam in the +𝑥′ direction. How fast does the wave front appear to be moving in the 𝑆 frame? Example from Chapter 1: A pion is moving through the laboratory at a speed of 0.931 𝑐. The pion decays into another particle, called a muon, which is emitted in the forward direction (the direction of the pion's velocity) with a speed of 0.271 𝑐 relative to the pion. You don't need to know the Lorentz Transformation in three dimensions, but since you asked:

~r 0 = ~r + ~��

� + 1~� · ~r � ct

4. Relativistic Doppler Shift What does a wave look like when you go from 𝑆 → 𝑆′. That is, a traveling wave

𝐸! 𝑠𝑖𝑛 𝑘 𝑥 − 𝑣𝑡 looks like what (??) in the 𝑆′ frame? Find the wavelength 𝜆′ and frequency 𝑓′ as observed in the 𝑆′ frame. Red Shift

𝑟 =1 + 𝛽1 − 𝛽

𝑧 ≡𝜆!"# − 𝜆!"

𝜆!"

𝑧 = 𝑟 − 1 (the red-shift)

𝑧 = 0 (no shift) 𝑧 > 0 (red-shift) 𝑧 < 0 (blue-shift) Redshift: 𝜆! = 𝑟 𝜆!" Blueshift: 𝜆! = 𝜆!" 𝑟 Compare this to the definition of red-shift using the Hubble constant. 𝑧 = !!

! 𝑑 where 𝐻! ≅ 68 (𝑘𝑚/𝑠)/𝑀𝑝𝑐

Example (2.8) A distant galaxy is moving away from the Earth at such high speed that the blue hydrogen line at a wavelength of 434nm is recorded at 699 nm, in the red range of the spectrum. What is the speed of the galaxy? What is the red-shift, 𝑧?

Space-Time Invariant Quantities (4 vectors) 𝑥! = (𝑐𝑡, 𝑥, 𝑦, 𝑧) a 4-dimensional space-time vector Event 1 𝑥!

! = (𝑐𝑡!, 𝑥!, 𝑦!, 𝑧!) Event 2 𝑥!

! = (𝑐𝑡!, 𝑥!, 𝑦!, 𝑧!) The Metric Equation: Δ𝑠! = 𝑥!

! − 𝑥!! ∙ 𝑥!,! − 𝑥!,! = 𝑐! Δ𝑡! − Δ𝑥! − Δ𝑦! − Δ𝑧!

• This equation specifies the frame-independent space-time

interval Δ𝑠 between two events, given their coordinate separations Δ𝑡, Δ𝑥, Δ𝑦, and Δ𝑧 in any given inertial frame.

• This equation applies only in an inertial reference frame.

• This equation is to space-time what the pythagorean theorem is to Euclidean space.

Δ𝑠! > 0 (time like) "Causal" Δ𝑠! < 0 (space like) Δ𝑠! = 0 (light like) on the "light cone" The "space-time interval squared" is a relativistic invariant. It is the same in all inertial frames.

Δs ! = Δs′ !

𝑐! Δ𝑡! − Δ𝑟! = 𝑐! Δ𝑡′ ! − Δ𝑟′ ! Example: In the solar system frame, two events are measured to occur 3.0 h apart in time and 1.5 h apart in space. Observers in an alien spaceship measure the two events to be separated by only

0.5 h in space. What is the time separation between the events in the alien's frame?

5. Space Time Diagrams

Slope = 1/𝛽 The new axes for 𝑥′ and 𝑐𝑡′ are found from the Lorentz Transformation Along the 𝑐𝑡′ axis, 𝑥′ = 0 so that 𝑐𝑡 = 𝑥 ⁄ 𝛽 Along the 𝑥′ axis, 𝑐𝑡′ = 0 so that 𝑥 = 𝑐𝑡 ⁄ 𝛽 where 𝑡𝑎𝑛 𝛼 = 𝛽

Space Time

Diagrams (cont'd) The curved path in 𝑥 − 𝑦 space is longer because its differential path length is determined by:

𝑑𝑠! = 𝑑𝑥! + 𝑑𝑦! similar to the Pythagorean theorem.

The curved path in 𝑥 − 𝑐𝑡 space is shorter because its differential path length is determined by: 𝑐 𝑑𝑡′ ! = 𝑐 𝑑𝑡 ! − 𝑑𝑥 !

(i.e., the "space-time interval squared" is a relativistic invariant). More precisely,

Δs ! = Δs′ !

and 𝑑𝑥′ ! = 0 as long as you’re on the curved path.